Eclipse: Building Commercial-Quality Plug-Ins (Eclipse (Addison-Wesley)) | 
vergrössern | Autoren: Eric Clayberg, Dan Rubel Urheber: Eric Clayberg, Dan Rubel Verleger: Addison-Wesley Longman, Amsterdam
Kaufen Neu: EUR 30,45
Neu (97) Gebraucht (7) ab EUR 25,57
Bewertung: 3 Rezensionen Verkaufsrang: 80395
Medium: Taschenbuch Ausgabe: 2Rev ed. Seiten: 864 Zahl Der Einzelteile: 1 Versandgewicht: 1.8 Maße (innen): 9.2 x 7.1 x 1.3
ISBN: 032142672X Dewey Dezimalzahl: 005.1 EAN: 9780321426727 ASIN: 032142672X
Publikation: April 2006 Verfügbarkeit: Versandfertig in 1 - 2 Werktagen Versand: Internationaler Versand möglich Zustand: Neu-Buch. Dieser Artikel kommt direkt aus Großbritannien per Express-Luftpost und dauert 7-10 Arbeitstage.
| |
| Ähnliche Artikel:
|
| Kundenrezensionen:
Highly practical, deeply technical: Excellent source for plugin developers März 16, 2007 Dr. Gernot Starke (Köln) 4 aus 4 fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
If the mere thought of "Eclipse plugin development" begins to speculate about crossing your mind (HGTTG, thanx) - go for THIS book. It starts from the beginning - but takes of after the first 100 pages and delves deep into plugin-nitty-gritty-stuff. Explains the Eclipse ecosystem architecture (good to get an overview), gives a brief SWT intro (also good to get a first and second grasp) and then covers a plethora of useful technical details (i18n, dialogs, wizards, preference apges, builders, natures, tracking-resource-changes, search and the like). Covers both Eclipse 3.1 and 3.2. The authors are techno-guys from Instantiations, a company well-known for its (partially Eclipse-based) Code-Pro tools - belonging to the REALLY advanced plugins - so those guys *really* know what they're writing about. I gave only 4 stars because I personally had wished for more "architectural" information and a bit less "deep-tech"...
Not bad, but too chaotic. September 29, 2006 R. Weissmann (Nürnberg) 0 aus 7 fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Its the first and only book so far I bought on Eclipse and so I can not compare it with other books, but I find it chaotic especially since it is setup by one example growing along the book. In my opinion this is not very helpfull, at the begining its fine but later on its distracting. The explanations are not very good and clear - I found much easier to understand explanations for specific subjects on the net. In general not a bad book, but could be better. By the way, I still think Eclipse is pretty badly developed (just saying SWT type accumulation !?!?) and I do not get the hype, that might also be a reason why I am not getting along so well with the book.
Nice and (almost) complete Dezember 7, 2004 11 aus 11 fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
This book is nicely written and tells you in detail how to build high quality Eclipse plugins. Almost all subjects are covered: the plugin fundamentials, defining own extension points, workspace and resources, views/editors, SWT/JFace, product branding and so on. All is illustrated with helpful diagrams.The only downsides are the "read as a whole style" and some missing subjects. This is mainly because a global example (a Favorites-View) is evolving through the book, so it is clear that some stuff is missing, as it's not needed by the example project (e.g. SourceEditors/CodeCompletion) Also, this makes it a bit hard to be used as a reference - you'll have to read whole chapters in order to dive into a subject. But all this is rather minor, and you'll never be able to cover all with one single book anyway; For building a commercial quality, stable basement for your Eclipse-based product, this book is a very good choice.
|
|
|