000 02594cam a2200253 a 4500
008 090421s2009 njua b 001 0 eng
020 _a0138146268
035 _a(Sirsi) u1474
040 _aEG-CaNU
_cEG-CaNU
_dEG-CaNU
042 _ancode
082 0 0 _a005.133
_2 22
100 1 _aLiang, Y. Daniel.
_9444
245 1 0 _aIntroduction to JAVA programming :
_b brief version /
_c Y. Daniel Liang.
246 3 0 _aJAVA programming
250 _a7th ed.
260 _aUpper Saddle River, NJ :
_b Pearson/Prentice Hall,
_c c2009.
300 _a733 p. ;
_c 26 cm.
500 _aIncludes index.
505 0 _aChapter 1 Introduction to Computers, Programs, and Java -- Chapter 2 Elementary Programming -- Chapter 3 Selections -- Chapter 4 Loops -- Chapter 5 Methods -- Chapter 6 Single-Dimensional Arrays -- Chapter 7 Multidimensional Arrays -- Chapter 8 Objects and Classes -- Chapter 9 Strings and Text I/O -- Chapter 10 Thinking in Objects -- Chapter 11 Inheritance and Polymorphism -- Chapter 12 GUI Basics -- Chapter 13 Exception Handling -- Chapter 14 Abstract Classes and Interfaces -- Chapter 15 Graphics -- Chapter 16 Event-Driven Programming -- Chapter 17 Creating Graphical User Interfaces -- Chapter 18 Applets and Multimedia -- Chapter 19 Binary I/O -- Chapter 20 Recursion.
520 _aIntroduction to Java Programming, Brief, 8e consists of the first 20 chapters from the Comprehensive version of Introduction to Java Programming. It introduces fundamentals of programming, problem-solving, object-oriented programming, and GUI programming. The Brief version is suitable for a CS1 course. Regardless of major, students will be able to grasp concepts of problem-solving and programming — thanks to Liang’s fundamentals-first approach, students learn critical problem solving skills and core constructs before object-oriented programming. Liang’s approach includes application-rich programming examples, which go beyond the traditional math-based problems found in most texts. Students are introduced to topics like control statements, methods, and arrays before learning to create classes. Later chapters introduce advanced topics including graphical user interface, exception handling, I/O, and data structures. Small, simple examples demonstrate concepts and techniques while longer examples are presented in case studies with overall discussions and thorough line-by-line explanations. In the Eighth Edition, only standard classes are used.
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
650 0 _aJava (Computer program language)
_9156
596 _a1
999 _c523
_d523