Listing 1 - 10 of 386 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
World Economic Forum. --- International economic relations. --- International finance --- Political aspects.
Choose an application
Beginning Java™ SE 6 Platform: From Novice to Professional steers you through the maze of Java Standard Edition (SE) 6 features. The first chapter sets the stage by introducing Java SE 6 in terms of its name change, themes, an overview, and a sampling of new features. It also briefly discusses the first two Java SE 6 updates. The remaining nine chapters organize features into the following categories: core libraries, GUI toolkits: AWT, GUI toolkits: Swing, internationalization, Java Database Connectivity, monitoring and management, networking, scripting, and security and web services. While exploring these chapters, you will encounter a variety of useful and interesting topics: introducing a new locale with its own currency, creating a new JConsole plug–in, creating a scripted JEditorPane component, invoking and communicating with JavaFX Script and JRuby scripts from a Java application that interacts with the Scripting API, signing an arbitrary XML document and validating a signed document’s XML signature, and accessing an existing web service are examples. With a few exceptions, each of chapters 2 through 10 alphabetically organizes its topics for convenient access. Furthermore, all 10 chapters end with a “Test Your Understanding” section that provides questions and exercises to help you reinforce your understanding of what you have read. Additional features are covered in the first three appendices. The first appendix introduces you to annotation types for annotation processors, Common Annotations 1.0, and several tables that conveniently organize additional annotation types that are new to Java SE 6. The second appendix explores changes made to various Java tools. For example, the Java compiler tool now supports annotation processing—you'll learn how to take advantage of this capability by writing your own annotation processor. Another example: you'll learn how to interact with the command–line script shell. The third appendix looks at a variety of performance enhancements, ranging from a fix for the gray–rect problem to single–threaded rendering. The second-to-last appendix provides answers and code to all of the questions and exercises in the various “Test Your Understanding” sections. The final appendix anticipates Java SE 7 by looking at features most likely to make the cut, including closures, the Java Module System, and the Swing Application Framework. By the time you finish this book, you will have mastered most of what’s new and improved in Java SE 6. Although a few features, such as multiple gradient paints and an in–depth look at StAX are not covered, you will find a growing list of articles devoted to these additional topics on the author’s website (JavaJeff.mb.ca). Follow the links at the bottom of the website’s Articles page.
Java (Computer program language) --- Internet programming. --- Programming languages (Electronic computers) --- Computer languages --- Computer program languages --- Computer programming languages --- Machine language --- Electronic data processing --- Languages, Artificial --- Computer programming --- Object-oriented programming languages --- JavaSpaces technology --- Information Technology --- Computer Science (Hardware & Networks) --- Java (Computer program language). --- Software engineering. --- Java. --- Software Engineering/Programming and Operating Systems. --- Computer software engineering --- Engineering --- Software Engineering.
Choose an application
German literature --- Fiction --- anno 1800-1899 --- German fiction --- Roman allemand --- History and criticism --- Histoire et critique
Choose an application
History of North America --- Canada --- Prairie Provinces --- Provinces des Prairies --- History --- Histoire
Choose an application
Sociology of religion --- History of Europe --- Political philosophy. Social philosophy --- Reformation --- Peasants' War, 1524-1525 --- Communism and Christianity --- Historiography --- Zimmermann, Wilhelm, --- 284.1*122 --- -#SBIB:321H23 --- #SBIB:321H60 --- Protestant Reformation --- Church history --- Counter-Reformation --- Protestantism --- Anabaptists --- Radical Reformation --- Christianity and communism --- Christianity --- Oorzaken van de hervorming:--sociale, politieke en economische toestand --- Geschiedenis van de politieke en sociale theorieën: 16e en 17e eeuw --- Westerse politieke en sociale theorieën vanaf de 19e eeuw: socialisme, marxisme, communisme, anarchisme --- History --- Zimmermann, Wilhelm --- 284.1*122 Oorzaken van de hervorming:--sociale, politieke en economische toestand --- #SBIB:321H23 --- Zimmerman, William, --- Zimmermann, Balthasar Friedrich Wilhelm, --- Zimmermann, W. --- T︠S︡immerman, V., --- Reformation - Historiography --- Zimmermann, Wilhelm, - 1807-1878
Choose an application
Choose an application
Christian special devotions --- Uncumber [s.] --- Wilgefortis (Legendary saint) --- Wilgeforte (Personnage légendaire) --- Art. --- Cult. --- Art --- Culte --- Wilgeforte (Personnage légendaire) --- Wilgefortis v. m.
Choose an application
Anabaptists --- Germany --- Biography --- Reformation --- MÜNZER (THOMAS), REFORMATEUR ALLEMAND, 1489-1525 --- ANABAPTISTES --- REFORME --- ALLEMAGNE --- BIOGRAPHIE --- HISTOIRE RELIGIEUSE --- 16E SIECLE
Choose an application
Grandmother Andre told stories in front of a campfire. Elizabeth Goudie wrote a memoir in school scribblers. Phyllis Knight taped hours of interviews with her son. Today's families rely on television and video cameras. They are all making history.In a different approach to that old issue, 'the Canadian identity,' Gerald Friesen links the media studies of Harold Innis to the social history of recent decades. The result is a framework for Canadian history as told by ordinary people. Friesen suggests that the common peoples' perceptions of time and space in what is now Canada changed with innovations in the dominant means of communication. He defines four communication-based epochs in Canadian history: the oral-traditional world of pre-contact Aboriginal people; the textual-settler household of immigrants; the print-capitalism of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries; and the screen-capitalism that has emerged in the last few decades. This analysis of communication is linked to distinctive political economies, each of which incorporates its predecessors in an increasingly complex social order.In each epoch, using the new communication technologies, people struggled to find the political means by which they could ensure that they and their households survived and, if they were lucky, prospered. Canada is the sum of their endeavours. "Citizens and Nation" demonstrates that it is possible to find meaning in the nation's past that will interest, among others, a new, young, and multicultural reading audience.
Bicycles --- Cycling --- Bicycle industry --- Recreation & Sports --- Social Sciences --- History --- Social aspects --- Bicycles and tricycles --- Bikes --- Cycles (Bicycles) --- Human powered vehicles --- Velocipedes --- Sporting goods industry --- Transportation equipment industry --- Bicycle riding --- Bicycle transportation --- Bicycling --- Aerobic exercises --- Locomotion --- Dicycles --- Tricycles --- Unicycles --- Communication --- Histoire --- Canada --- Civilization --- Social conditions --- Philosophy --- Civilisation --- Conditions sociales --- Philosophie --- Bicyclettes --- Cyclisme --- Aspect social --- Industrie --- Philosophy. --- Handcycles --- Canada. --- Canada (Province) --- Canadae --- Ceanada --- Chanada --- Chanadey --- Dominio del Canadá --- Dominion of Canada --- Jianada --- Kʻaenada --- Kaineḍā --- Kanada --- Ḳanadah --- Kanadaja --- Kanadas --- Ḳanade --- Kanado --- Kanakā --- Province of Canada --- Republica de Canadá --- Yn Chanadey --- History. --- Civilization. --- Social conditions.
Choose an application
Munzer, Thomas --- Addresses, essays, lectures --- 286 <43> "15" --- Anabaptisten Duitsland. Zwickauer Propheten. Abecedarianen. Münster. Melchiorieten--?"15" --- -Addresses, essays, lectures --- Münzer, Thomas, --- 286 <43> "15" Anabaptisten Duitsland. Zwickauer Propheten. Abecedarianen. Münster. Melchiorieten--?"15" --- -Münzer, Thomas --- Münzer, Thomas, --- Mi︠u︡nt︠s︡er, Tomas, --- Muentzer, Thomas, --- Müntzer, Thomas, --- Müntzer, Tomáš, --- Munzer, Thomas - Addresses, essays, lectures
Listing 1 - 10 of 386 | << page >> |
Sort by
|