This text is intended for a 1-semester CS1 course sequence. The Brief Version contains the first 18 chapters of the Comprehensive Version. The first 13 chapters are appropriate for preparing the AP Computer Science exam.
For courses in Java Programming.
A fundamentals-first introduction to basic programming concepts and techniques
Designed to support an introductory programming course, Introduction to Java Programming and Data Structuresteaches you concepts of problem-solving and object-orientated programming using a fundamentals-first approach. Beginner programmers learn critical problem-solving techniques then move on to grasp the key concepts of object-oriented, GUI programming, data structures, and Web programming. This course approaches Java GUI programming using JavaFX, which has replaced Swing as the new GUI tool for developing cross-platform-rich Internet applications and is simpler to learn and use. The 11th edition has been completely revised to enhance clarity and presentation, and includes new and expanded content, examples, and exercises.
Also available with MyLab Programming.
MyLab Programming (TM) is an online learning system designed to engage students and improve results. MyLab Programming consists of programming exercises correlated to the concepts and objectives in this book. Through practice exercises and immediate, personalized feedback, MyLab Programming improves the programming competence of beginning students who often struggle with the basic concepts of programming languages.
Note: You are purchasing a standalone product; MyLab Programming does not come packaged with this content. Students, if interested in purchasing this title with MyLab Programming, ask your instructor to confirm the correct package ISBN and Course ID. Instructors, contact your Pearson representative for more information.
If you would like to purchase both the physical text and MyLab Programming, search for:
0134694511/9780134694511 Introduction to Java Programming, Comprehensive Version plus MyLab Programming with Pearson eText -- Access Card Package, 11/e
Package consists of:
This text is intended for a 1-semester CS1 course sequence. The Brief Version contains the first 18 chapters of the Comprehensive Version. The first 13 chapters are appropriate for preparing the AP Computer Science exam.
For courses in Java Programming.
A fundamentals-first introduction to basic programming concepts and techniques
Designed to support an introductory programming course, Introduction to Java Programming and Data Structuresteaches you concepts of problem-solving and object-orientated programming using a fundamentals-first approach. Beginner programmers learn critical problem-solving techniques then move on to grasp the key concepts of object-oriented, GUI programming, data structures, and Web programming. This course approaches Java GUI programming using JavaFX, which has replaced Swing as the new GUI tool for developing cross-platform-rich Internet applications and is simpler to learn and use. The 11th edition has been completely revised to enhance clarity and presentation, and includes new and expanded content, examples, and exercises.
Also available with MyLab Programming.
MyLab Programming (TM) is an online learning system designed to engage students and improve results. MyLab Programming consists of programming exercises correlated to the concepts and objectives in this book. Through practice exercises and immediate, personalized feedback, MyLab Programming improves the programming competence of beginning students who often struggle with the basic concepts of programming languages.
Note: You are purchasing a standalone product; MyLab Programming does not come packaged with this content. Students, if interested in purchasing this title with MyLab Programming, ask your instructor to confirm the correct package ISBN and Course ID. Instructors, contact your Pearson representative for more information.
If you would like to purchase both the physical text and MyLab Programming, search for:
0134694511/9780134694511 Introduction to Java Programming, Comprehensive Version plus MyLab Programming with Pearson eText -- Access Card Package, 11/e
Package consists of:
1 Introduction to Computers, Programs, and Java
2 Elementary Programming
3 Selections
4 Mathematical Functions, Characters, and Strings
5 Loops
6 Methods
7 Single-Dimensional Arrays
8 Multidimensional Arrays
9 Objects and Classes
10 Object-Oriented Thinking
11 Inheritance and Polymorphism
12 Exception Handling and Text I/O
13 Abstract Classes and Interfaces
14 JavaFX Basics
15 Event-Driven Programming and Animations
16 JavaFX UI Controls and Multimedia
17 Binary I/O
18 Recursion
19 Generics
20 Lists, Stacks, Queues, and Priority Queues
21 Sets and Maps
22 Developing Efficient Algorithms
23 Sorting
24 Implementing Lists, Stacks, Queues, and Priority Queues
25 Binary Search Trees
26 AVL Trees
27 Hashing
28 Graphs and Applications
29 Weighted Graphs and Applications
30 Aggregate Operations for Collection Streams
Appendixes
Appendix A Java Keywords
Appendix B The ASCII Character Set
Appendix C Operator Precedence Chart
Appendix D Java Modifiers
Appendix E Special Floating-Point Values
Appendix F Number Systems
Appendix G Bitwise Operations
Appendix H Regular Expressions
Appendix I Enumerated types
Bonus Chapters 31–44 are available from the Companion Website at www.pearsonhighered.com/liang:
31 Advanced JavaFX and FXML
32 Multithreading and Parallel Programming
33 Networking
34 Java Database Programming
35 Advanced Database Programming
36 Internationalization
37 Servlets
38 JavaServer Pages
39 JavaServer Faces
40 RMI
41 Web Services
42 2-4 Trees and B-Trees
43 Red-Black Trees
44 Testing Using JUnit
Dr. Y. Daniel Liang earned his Ph.D. in
Computer Science from the University of Oklahoma in 1991, and an MS
and BS in Computer Science from Fudan University in Shanghai,
China, in 1986 and 1983. Prior to joining Armstrong, he was an
associate professor in computer science at Purdue University in
Fort Wayne, where he twice received the Excellence in Research
award.
Dr. Liang was trained in theoretical computer science. He was
active in graph algorithms from 1990 to 1995 and published more
than ten papers in several established journals such as SIAM
Journal on Computing, Discrete Applied Mathematics, Acta
Informatics, and Information Processing Letters. Since 1996, he has
devoted to writing texts and published more than thirty books with
Prentice Hall. His popular computer science texts are widely
adopted in the world.
Dr. Liang was elected a Java Champion in 2005 by Sun Microsystems
and has given lectures on Java internationally.
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