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| Head First Servlets and JSP: Passing the Sun Certified Web Component Developer Exam (Brain-Friendly Guides) | 
enlarge | Authors: Bryan Basham, Kathy Sierra, Bert Bates Publisher: O'Reilly Media, Inc. Category: Book
List Price: $49.99 Buy New: $28.79 You Save: $21.20 (42%)
New (39) Used (6) from $24.86
Avg. Customer Rating: 132 reviews Sales Rank: 14689
Format: Illustrated Media: Paperback Edition: 2 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 911 Shipping Weight (lbs): 4.2 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 8 x 2.2
ISBN: 0596516681 Dewey Decimal Number: 005 EAN: 9780596516680 ASIN: 0596516681
Publication Date: August 7, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand new item. Over 3.5 million customers served. Order now. Selling online since 1995. Order with confidence. Code: B20081202223058T
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Product Description Looking to study up for the new J2EE 1.5 Sun Certified Web Component Developer (SCWCD) exam? This book will get you way up to speed on the technology you'll know it so well, in fact, that you can pass the brand new J2EE 1.5 exam. If that's what you want to do, that is. Maybe you don't care about the exam, but need to use servlets and JSPs in your next project. You're working on a deadline. You're over the legal limit for caffeine. You can't waste your time with a book that makes sense only AFTER you're an expert (or worse, one that puts you to sleep). Learn how to write servlets and JSPs, what makes a web container tick (and what ticks it off), how to use JSP's Expression Language (EL for short), and how to write deployment descriptors for your web applications. Master the c:out tag, and get a handle on exactly what's changed since the older J2EE 1.4 exam. You don't just pass the new J2EE 1.5 SCWCD exam, you'll understand this stuff and put it to work immediately. Head First Servlets and JSP doesn't just give you a bunch of facts to memorize; it drives knowledge straight into your brain. You'll interact with servlets and JSPs in ways that help you learn quickly and deeply. And when you're through with the book, you can take a brand-new mock exam, created specifically to simulate the real test-taking experience.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 127 more reviews...
Head First Servlets & JSP rocks! October 2, 2004 42 out of 47 found this review helpful
Looking for either an enjoyable intro into JSP and Servlets or material on passing the Sun Certified Web Component Developer exam? Grab a copy of Head First Servlets & JSP by Bryan Basham, Kathy Sierra, and Bert Bates. It rocks...
Chapter list: Intro; Why use Servlets & JSPs; Web app architecture; Mini MVC tutorial; Being a servlet; Being a web app; Conversational state; Being a JSP; Script-free pages; Custom tags are powerful; When JSTL is not enough; Deploying your web app; Keep it secret, keep it safe; The power of filters; Enterprise design patterns; Final mock exam; Index
I've stated my preference in the past to learning subjects with a bit of humor thrown in. OK... a *lot* of humor. If I have a chance to pick up a new tech skill with a study guide that makes me laugh and stay interested, I'm in heaven. Is it any wonder then that I absolutely love the Head First series? Bates and Sierra have created a concept that is unlike anything else on the market. Through the use of cartoons, hand-drawn examples, off-beat questions, and other various types of learning material, they engage your brain on a number of levels. And as a result, you're sucked in and learning stuff in spite of yourself.
In this installment, they tackle the subject of servlets and JSPs. Rather than try and explain things "technically", they have a common cast of characters throughout the book making observations and points about the material. Using the hand-drawn notes around illustrations and code, you quickly understand the underlying concepts of what happens with servlet requests and responses, and how JSPs interact with the web server. And given that there are exercises and questions at the end of each chapter (along with the answers), you have a chance to reinforce your learning immediately.
There are two uses for this book. The primary goal is to help you pass the Sun Certified Web Component Developer exam. If you already know about servlets and JSPs, get the book for the mock exam and the questions at the end of each chapter. The authors helped write the actual Sun test, so you'll get a good feel for the types of questions you'll face. The other use of this book would be to learn and understand the subject matter, like a tutorial. Once again, an excellent choice for that purpose. You'll still need to get some sort of "official" reference book of some sort if you get deeper into the material, but this is a perfect way to get started.
Once again, another winner from the warped minds that created the Head First concept. May they continue to thrive for a long time!
It's OK May 31, 2006 27 out of 39 found this review helpful
The subtitle of the book is "Passing the Sun certified Web Component Developer Exam" and it would be helpful for that. The real issue is that, like all exam prep books, this book doesn't help much with creating real world applications or go into tremendous depth. I would only recommend this book to those that want to study for the aforementioned exam, but not for those who want to really learn JSP and servlets.
Head first SCWCD September 19, 2005 21 out of 25 found this review helpful
Written in the now familiar light and funny style of the Head First Series, this text is also extremely precise, clear, correct and informative. Be warned though, tit has the wrong title. (that's why I give it 4 star instead of 5). It should be called Head First SCWCD and not Head First Servlets & JSP, since the scope of this text is to prepare you for the SCWCD exam, and it succeeds in that brilliantly. As a first book to learn Servlets & JSP programming though, I think it is a terrible, if funny, book. In fact it is very good on conceptual matters and especially on the tricky casees and questions that you might encounter in the exam, but it lacks the hands on and by example approach necessary to learn how to actually DO things. [...] This said, it is still a great book if you intend to refresh or improve your Servlet and JSP knowledge, or to actually take the exam and get certified. Only , please, enough with this style, let's find another funny one, if I read another Java book with martial arts characters in it I will feel sick ! ;)
Too many errors, typos, and inconsistencies November 23, 2004 20 out of 26 found this review helpful
I actually like this book, perhaps a lot. Its physical quality (cover, paper, print, etc.) is good enough. Its approach to teaching is good (lots of charts, tables, diagrams, graphics). And, although I don't know for sure, I have no reason to expect that this book's technical information is other than correct. The problem: 1) typos, 2) grammatical errors, 3) mislabeling and inconsistencies between the text and the code. It's all pretty horrendous, completely unacceptable, not professional at all. Sorry authors, if you want a good review, you must complete the job with a thorough edit of this book. As it stands now, it has potential, but it is not finished.
Steve Whitlatch
Disappointing Effort April 29, 2005 13 out of 27 found this review helpful
I was truly disappointed with this book. Kathy Siera is a very prominent figure in the Java world, but the style that she uses in her Head First Series is just not efficient enough. In other words, for some working professionals like me, getting to the point as fast as possible is a must, and these head first books are not doing that for me. You have to work your way through, ahem junk, to get to the useful stuff, and you waste time doing that. If you are like me, you would prefer a book that hits all the spots in the shortest way possible. I mean it is not really possible to read 500 something pages of junk in two weeks and get ready for your SCWCD exam. I know I 'll probably catch hell for this, but I do not recommend Head First series to serious developers. Instead, I recommend the Manning Publishing book "SCWCD Exam Study Kit," which also comes with JWEBPlus, which is a very cool test engine. Save yourself some time and stay away from this book.
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