| Patrick Naughton and Herbert Schildt. Java - The Complete Reference. McGraw Hill, 1997. |
....entities and relations. Although most of the commonly used programming languages are strongly typed, the libraries that implement containers are often designed to collect objects whose type is not declared. The Collections framework that is distributed with the new version of the Java library [9] provides several classes and algorithms to group and manipulate Objects, i.e. instances of the top level class from which all user classes descend. The ROOT C library [4] which is widely employed in high energy physics computing, offers several containers and container operations for ....
P. Naughton, H. Schildt, and H. Schildt. Java 2: the Complete Reference. Osborne McGraw-Hill, 1999.
....globals, etc. Finally, preprocessor directives can be used in C to define any textual replacement, possibly with parameters. This can be used for constants, functions or even to modify the surface syntax of the language, often making the code difficult to read and understand. The Java language [6] was designed as a better C [1] In the early days of its development, it was called C , meaning that it was intended to retain the good parts of C while subtracting the bad ones. In Java everything must be in a class, so that there are no global data structures. Control flow is very ....
....They represent a minimal library replacing or wrapping the main C facilities and core functions that are not adherent to Cjj. They are derived from the Java library, so that additional details on their expected interface and organization can be found in the literature about Java (e.g. see [6]) Utility libraries provided in a working Cjj framework are not required to preserve the names and organization of the classes and methods described in the following. They must necessarily be compliant with Cjj constraints, and they should offer functionalities comparable to those listed below. ....
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P. Naughton, H. Schildt, and H. Schildt. Java 2: the Complete Reference. Osborne McGraw-Hill, 1999.
.... Java is a simple, object oriented, distributed, interpreted, robust, secure, architecture neutral, portable, high performance, multi threaded and dynamic language [3] Among these features, Java makes network programming easier by encapsulating connection functionality in socket classes [4]. Java is mostly used in writing distributed computing programs or GUI based programs because of its portability feature, and Java goes a lot further than most languages to obtain not just portability but identical program behavior on different platforms. Java is mainly intended for the ....
Naughton P, Schildt H. JAVA: The Complete Reference. McGraw Hill Inc., 1997.
....[3] Java: A simple, object oriented, distributed, interpreted, robust, secure, architecture neutral, portable, highperformance, multi threaded, and dynamic language . Among these features, Java makes network programming easier by encapsulating connection functionality in socket classes [4]. Java is mostly used in writing distributed computing programs or GUI based programs because of its portability feature and Java goes a lot further than most languages to obtain not just portability but identical program behavior on different platforms. Java is mainly intended for the development ....
Patrick Naughton and Herbert Schildt. JAVA: The Complete Reference. Mc-Graw Hill Inc., 1997.
....[3] Java: A simple, object oriented, distributed, interpreted, robust, secure, architecture neutral, portable, highperformance, multi threaded, and dynamic language . Among these features, Java makes network programming easier by encapsulating connection functionality in socket classes [4]. Java is mostly used in writing distributed computing programs or GUI based programs because of its portability feature and Java goes a lot further than most languages to obtain not mainly just portability but identical program behavior on different platforms. Java is mainly intended for the ....
Patrick Naughton and Herbert Schildt. JAVA: The Complete Reference. Mc-Graw Hill Inc., 1997.
....tion [3] Java: A simple, object oriented, distributed, interpreted, robust, secure, architecture neutral, portable, high performance, multi threaded, and dynamic language . Among these features, Java makes network programming easier by encapsulating connection functionality in socket classes [4]. Java is mostly used in writing distributed computing programs because of its portability feature and it goes a lot further than most languages to obtain not mainly just portability but identical program behavior on different platforms. In distributed computing, an application is made up of ....
Patrick Naughton and Herbert Schildt, JAVA: The Complete Reference, Mc-Graw Hill Inc., 1997.
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Patrick Naughton and Herbert Schildt. Java - The Complete Reference. McGraw Hill, 1997.
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