Better Faster Lighter Java [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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Better Faster Lighter Java [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

Justin Gehtland; Bruce A. Tate

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Acknowledgments


This book has been a real pleasure to write and I hope that
translates to something that's a joy for you to
read. The names on the cover are necessarily only a small part of the
total team effort that it took to produce this book. It would be
impossible to thank every person that contributed, but I feel the
obligation to try.

Both Bruce and Justin would like to thank Michael Loukides for his
gentle encouragement, expert touch, and steady hand. At times, it may
have seemed like this book would write itself, but
don't underestimate your impact on it. Thanks for
giving us the freedom to do something unique, and the gentle guidance
and leadership when the book required it. We also greatly appreciate
our outstanding technical reviewers, including Stuart Holloway, Andy
Hunt, Dave Thomas, and Glenn Vanderburg. We respect each of you
deeply. It's truly an honor to have such a combined
brain-trust review our book. Special thanks go to Rod Johnson for his
quick response and thorough attention while editing the Spring
chapter. I'm astounded by what he's
accomplished.

Many heartfelt thanks also go to the production and marketing teams
at O'Reilly, including David Chu for doing whatever
it takes to speed the project along, Robert Romano for his work on
the graphics, Daniel H. Steinberg for keeping us in front of his
community, Colleen Gorman for her experienced, delicate editing, and
Kyle Hart for her tireless promotion.

This book is about lighter, faster technologies and it relies heavily
on the opinions and work of some pioneers. Thanks to the folks at
IntelliJ, for use of a fantastic IDE. We used it to create many of
the examples in this book. Thanks to Ted Neward, for his help in
understanding JSR 175, and for his unique perspective. Ted, you scare
me, only in a good way (sometimes). For his work on Spring, we thank
again Rod Johnson. Thanks also to those who contributed to the open
source JPetstore examples, including Clinton Began for his original
JPetstore, which formed the foundation for Spring's
version, and Juergen Hoeller's work to port that
example to Spring. Gavin King and crew we thank for a fantastic
persistence framework. Your remarkable accomplishments are rewriting
Java history in the area of transparent persistence. We also would
like to thank Doug Cutting and the entire Lucene maintenance team for
their work on that excellent product. Dave Thomas and Mike Clark are
Java leaders in the areas of test-driven development and decoupled
designs. Thanks to both for providing credible examples for this
book.


Bruce A. Tate


I would like to personally thank Jay Zimmerman for giving me a soap
box for this critical message. As a mentor, you've
taught me how to run a small business, you've
trusted me with your customers, and you've been a
jovial friend on the road. Thanks go to Maciej for helping to get the
ball rolling and for help outlining this book. Thanks also go to Mike
Clark for your ideas on unit testing, and your friendship. Most
importantly, I thank my family. You are all the reason that I write.
Thanks to Kayla and Julia for your smiles, kisses, and hugs when I am
down; to my greatest love Maggie, for your inspiration and
understanding; and most of all Connie, for 32 years of loving those
who have been the closest to me. Connie, this book is for you.


Justin Gehtland


I would like to personally thank Stuart Halloway for being
preternaturally busy all the time. I'd also like to
say thanks to Ted Neward, Kevin Jones, and Erik Hatcher for forming a
gravitational well pulling me towards Java. Mostly,
I'd like to thank my wife Lisa and daughter Zoe, who
prove to me constantly that work isn't everything.
Someday, perhaps, I'll write a book
you'd both like to read.


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