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The book is organized in six chapters: Introducing Java and Java applets; Java and the Internet; Applets explained; Cool
applets; Java in depth; and Building an applet. The bulk of this book provides an introduction to where Java came from, why
it is important, how it fits in with the Internet, how to incorporate applets into Web pages, how to compile Java, and so
on. There is introductory material on the syntax and semantics of the language and the accompanying class libraries, but the
book does not go into much detail on these.
Appendices provide a quick reference to tie applets discussed in the book with the examples provided on the CD-ROM, a list of Web sites related to Java, source code listings for the applets in the sixth chapter, and a series of Unix-style manual pages for the Java compiler, Java interpreter, and appletviewer.
This book is neither a full-blown tutorial on the Java language and class libraries, nor is it a reference. It provides a decent introduction to Java in the context of the Internet and World Wide Web, with plenty of pointers to other sources of material and lots of examples to play with. Non-programmers can benefit from the first four chapters with little problem. But later portions of this book will be difficult for readers who do not possess a background in C++ or other object-oriented languages -- despite the fact that the authors indicate all that is necessary is a basic background in C.
Hooked on Java is written by experts on the subject matter, which is something that has been lacking in many of the books that have been hastily written and published over the past several months. However, the usefulness of this book will be relatively short-lived. Once the reader becomes familiar with the basic material, there is little need to refer to the book again. In addition, new books, such as Java in a Nutshell (David Flanagan, O'Reilly & Associates, 1996), provide a more detailed treatment of the language, and class libraries are beginning to emerge on the marketplace which will further devalue this book.
The CD-ROM accompanying the book contains the beta version of the Java developer's kit (JDK) for Windows 95, Windows NT, and Solaris 2.x, as well as sample applets, Java-enabled HTML pages, and Java source-code examples. Since the publication of this book, the JDK has come out of beta, and an updated version can be obtained from http://www.javasoft.com/java.sun.com/products/JDK/index.html.
More information on this book is available on the Addison-Wesley home page (www.aw.com/devpress/java). Hooked On Java is the first of a series of books authored by Sun Microsystems employees that will be forthcoming from Addison-Wesley. To see what other titles will be available in Addison-Wesley's Java Series, check out http://www.aw.com/cp/javaseries.html.
Hooked on Java: Creating Hot Web Sites with Java Applets
By Arthur van Hoff, Sami Shaio, and Orca Starbuck
Addison-Wesley, 1996
181 pages
9.95
ISBN 0-201-48837-X
Read more about Core Java in JavaWorld's Core Java section.