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JavaWorld July 2000 Tom Sullivan |
WebGain gaining ground Through its recent string of product and company acquisitions, WebGain is building up its Java toolbox and moving into the market for platform-independent component-based development. |
JavaWorld July 2000 Jacob Weintraub |
Learn how to store data in objects In this second installment of Java 101, Jacob Weintraub delves into storing data in Java and the various ways you can use that data. Specifically, he examines how objects store data and how you can pass data to objects in method calls... |
JavaWorld July 2000 Mark Johnson |
Programming XML in Java, Part 3 An in-depth look at the Document Object Model (DOM), the most common alternative XML-processing mechanism. See how you can use DOM to manipulate the source code data in an illustrative example program... |
JavaWorld July 2000 Nitin Nanda |
JDBC drivers in the wild In this article, we'll examine the basic architecture of the four different types of JDBC drivers and enumerate their pros and cons. In addition, we'll evaluate and compare five specific industry-standard drivers... |
JavaWorld July 2000 Arden Yingling |
News and New Product Briefs (July 7, 2000) GemStone updates J2EE application server platform; Buzzeo and iPlanet offer new EJB-based calendar product; Manning Publications releases server-based Java guide; CrossLogic adds Versant enJin to its Java-based application development services; Peernet updates Java bar-code tools. |
JavaWorld June 2000 Michael Ball |
XSL gives your XML some style Separating content from presentation is one of XML's major features. But eventually you need to style that XML into something presentable. That's where XSL (Extensible Stylesheet Language) comes in -- XSL transforms XML from one document type to another. Servlets provide a great platform for doing those translations. In this article you'll learn how to transform XML into HTML, using servlets. |
JavaWorld June 2000 Paul Corazza |
Using the if-then-else framework, Part 3 In this final part of a three-part series, Paul Corazza analyzes the if-then-else framework's performance and shows you how to optimize algorithms and implementation choices and minimize the risks involved in using the framework in larger-scale projects. The final product is a sleek, industry-ready upgrade of the prototype presented in previous articles, complete with new user options, a performance test harness, and automated safety features capable of handling thousands of conditions and rules. |
JavaWorld June 2000 Arden Yingling |
News and New Product Briefs SPEC releases new performance evaluation tool for Java business applications; SoftQuad offers XMetal upgrade; HP to add multilingual input and display capabilities to information appliances; O'Reilly publishes Java guide. |
JavaWorld June 2000 Lee Copeland |
Big Blue, Sun in Java dispute In a bid to calm fears that it might not adhere to rival Sun Microsystems' branded Java platform, IBM this week publicly claimed that it indeed licenses the platform and plans to adhere to it. Sun, however, continued to insist that IBM is not a licensee.... |
JavaWorld June 2000 Todd Coopee, InfoWorld Test Center |
Solid JRun serves up Java on a budget Allaire's JRun 3.0 boasts support for today's hottest server-side Java technologies such as EJB 1.1 and JMS 1.0, as well as easy installation and true clustering support in the Enterprise Edition.... |
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