Maven: A Developer's Notebook

[Vincent Massol, Timothy M. OBrien] ✓ Maven: A Developers Notebook Ø Download Online eBook or Kindle ePUB. Maven: A Developers Notebook good on strengths, but key holes according to Jeanne Boyarsky. Maven - A Developers Notebook is good for covering the surface of how to do a build in Maven. There is great explanation on the installation of Maven and building Java projects. Coverage of reporting and writing plugins was also good.Coverage of building WARs was fair. It would have been nice to see a JSP or resource files in the example, rather than just code. Noticeably absent was how to build an EJB project and an EAR. And wh

Maven: A Developer's Notebook

Author :
Rating : 4.48 (666 Votes)
Asin : 0596007507
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 224 Pages
Publish Date : 2016-07-15
Language : English

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"good on strengths, but key holes" according to Jeanne Boyarsky. "Maven - A Developer's Notebook" is good for covering the surface of how to do a build in Maven. There is great explanation on the installation of Maven and building Java projects. Coverage of reporting and writing plugins was also good.Coverage of building WARs was fair. It would have been nice to see a JSP or resource files in the example, rather than just code. Noticeably absent was how to build an EJB project and an EAR. And while the book demonstrates connecting to CVS/Subversion, it could use an example on c. "The Maven Advantage" according to Yogi S. The Maven framework enables project teams to organize, configure, and collaborate effectively."A developer's Notebook" is an excellent resource to understand multiple perspecitves of Maven.Along with insights on how to develop and organize projects using Maven, the book skillfully discusses the current status of the Maven project(Maven 1 and Maven 2), Key differences and relationships beetween Ant and Maven(yes, they do not compete but collaborate), the short and longterm benefits of using Maven, details on how ov. C. Hamilton said Fast start, gets right to the point.. This is a great book to get a quick introduction to Maven. At about 185 pages, it gets right to the point. It's written using labs and each new one builds on the previous one.I have used Ant and know how it works but was in the dark when it came to Maven. This book gave me the knowledge I needed to understand and modify an existing Maven project within the first two chapters.It's not a reference manual, and it's not one of these 500 page tomes that weighs a ton but is light on substance. There's real content in a

Like all titles in O'Reilly's Developer's Notebook series, this no-nonsense book skips the boring prose and cuts right to the chase. Tired of writing the same build logic for every project? Using Maven, you can leverage the experience of the community to avoid the tedious process of creating yet another build script for each new project.Maven: A Developer's Notebook begins by introducing you to the concept of project object model (POM), and then offers further details on the essential features of Maven. Maven is a new project management and comprehension tool which provides an elegant way to share build logic across projects. It's an approach that forces you to get your hands dirty by working through a series of poignant labs-exercises that speak to you instead of at you.Plus, Maven: A Developer's No

He lives in the City of Light, Paris, France.. In addition to being an active member of the Maven development team, Vincent Massol is the creator of the Jakarta Cactus framework. After having spent four years as a technical architect on several major projects (mostly J2EE), Vincent is now the co-founder and CTO of Pivolis, a company specializing in applying agile methodologies to offshore software development

After having spent four years as a technical architect on several major projects (mostly J2EE), Vincent is now the co-founder and CTO of Pivolis, a company specializing in applying agile methodologies to offshore software development. About the AuthorIn addition to being an active member of the Maven development team, Vincent Massol is the creator of the Jakarta Cactus framework. He lives in the City of Light, Paris, France.