Making extensive use of examples, this textbook on Java programming
teaches the fundamental skills for getting started in a command-line
environment. Meant to be used for a one-semester course to build solid
foundations in Java, Fundamentals of Java Programming eschews second-semester content to concentrate on over 180 code examples and 250 exercises.
Key
object classes (String, Scanner, PrintStream, Arrays, and File) are
included to get started in Java programming. The programs are explained
with almost line-by-line descriptions, also with chapter-by-chapter
coding exercises.
Teaching resources include solutions to the exercises, as well as digital lecture slides.
By:
Mitsunori Ogihara
Imprint: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Country of Publication: Switzerland
Edition: Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2018
Dimensions:
Height: 254mm,
Width: 178mm,
Spine: 27mm
Weight: 1.009kg
ISBN: 9783030077853
ISBN 10: 3030077853
Pages: 515
Publication Date: 30 January 2019
Audience:
College/higher education
,
Primary
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Active
1 Java and the Java Virtual Machine.- 2 Our First Programs.- 3 Using Data for Computation.- 4 Reading Keyboard Input.- 5 Decomposing Code into Components.- 6 Passing Values to and from Methods.- 7 For-Loops.- 8 Using Conditions to Control the Flow.- 9 Formatted Printing using printf.- 10 String Methods for Text Processing.- 11 Branching Using Switch Segments.- 12 While and Do-while Loops.- 13 Arrays.- 14 Class Arrays, Resizing Arrays, and Arrays with Capacity.- 15 Multidimensional Arrays.- 16 Class File.- 17 Designing Object Classes.- 18 Interfaces, Subclasses, Inheritance, and Polymorphism.- 19 Cumulative Algorithms.- 20 Recursive Algorithms.
Mitsunori Ogihara is a professor of Computer Science at the University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL. Prior to joining the University of Miami, he was a professor of Computer Science at the University of Rochester, Rochester, NY. He is presently an editor of Theory of Computing Systems (Springer), International Journal of Foundations of Computer Science (World Scientific Press), and Open Computer Science Journal (De Gruyter). He has published three books: A Complexity Theory Companion (Springer), Music Data Mining (CRC Press), and one in Japanese. He has published more than 190 research articles.