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From: markspace on 3 Jun 2010 17:07 Mike Barnard wrote: > I'm in the UK, employed with a family so have little time for college > courses. Do you have any coursework or experience programming? This will make a difference in what we recommend. Greenhorns need some basic programming knowledge, which I'd have to think about how to proceed. "How to program" is hard to acquire on your own. Some sort of correspondence course might be an option, although not a first option. > The java website has Greenfoot ... > The books on Amazon seem to be about 10 years out of date... If you could let us know what you actually looked, it might help us help you. I'd recommend O'Reilly's "Learning Java" if you have some programming experience. Get the 3rd edition, that's up-to-date. It would be hard for someone with no programming experience to learn from this however. There's also a programming course I took at javapassion.com, but they charge now, and their course is also aimed at more experienced programmers and not people with no experience. The "right way" to learn is to take formal course work. There's enough computer science, math, and software engineering involved that it helps to have an organized study plan, which is very hard to do on your own. Also developing contacts in the industry can be done through a school more easily, and this is also very helpful in one's career. Still, let's think about your situation and try to get something that works for you.
From: Jeff Higgins on 3 Jun 2010 18:05 On 6/3/2010 3:41 PM, Mike Barnard wrote: > > So, reccomendations for a way to learn Jave, please? Properly. > <http://java.sun.com/learning/index.jsp>
From: Arne Vajhøj on 3 Jun 2010 18:27 On 03-06-2010 15:41, Mike Barnard wrote: > I'm interested in learning about Java programming. I'm suprised on > searching through this forum that there seems to be no other "how..." > threads so I'll start one. > > I'm in the UK, employed with a family so have little time for college > courses. Not that I've found any near me anyway. I want to write a > desktop application that is cross platform and won't need high speed > (C++) code running so Java seems ideal. I have the JDK and netbeans > 6.8 on my PC, now I need lessons. > > The java website has Greenfoot which seems of no use to me. I haven't > looked at the others yet as the preamble says they expect prior > programming experience or teaching. > > The books on Amazon seem to be about 10 years out of date and the new > ones have reviews that say they are full of old info. > > Web tutorials are notorious for teaching bad practices, so I > understand but they can't be all bad, can they. > > So, reccomendations for a way to learn Jave, please? Properly. I believe there are good web tutorials as well. http://java.sun.com/docs/books/tutorial/ is not so bad. But books are usually good for learning programming stuff. If you are not an experienced software developer that just need to learn Java, then you need a book with focus on good explaining and not on super duper JLS correctness in use of all terms. I would go for one of the popular writers of programming languages for beginners books: Horton, Eckel, Schildt etc.. They may not actually be very good at the language, but they are good at writing beginners books about programming languages. Arne
From: Arne Vajhøj on 3 Jun 2010 18:29 On 03-06-2010 15:41, Mike Barnard wrote: > I want to write a > desktop application that is cross platform and won't need high speed > (C++) code running so Java seems ideal. http://java.dzone.com/jazoon-java-performance Arne
From: Arne Vajhøj on 3 Jun 2010 18:29 On 03-06-2010 15:47, Mike Barnard wrote: > On Thu, 03 Jun 2010 20:41:35 +0100, Mike Barnard > <m.barnard.trousers(a)thunderin.co.uk> wrote: .... > Pardon the spelling mistakes. It was perfectly readable. No problem. Arne
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