buchspektrum Internet-Buchhandlung

Neuerscheinungen 2015

Stand: 2020-02-01
Schnellsuche
ISBN/Stichwort/Autor
Herderstraße 10
10625 Berlin
Tel.: 030 315 714 16
Fax 030 315 714 14
info@buchspektrum.de

Robert Fischer

Java Closures and Lambda


2015. xii, 220 S. 9 SW-Abb. 254 mm
Verlag/Jahr: SPRINGER, BERLIN; APRESS 2015
ISBN: 1-430-25998-1 (1430259981)
Neue ISBN: 978-1-430-25998-5 (9781430259985)

Preis und Lieferzeit: Bitte klicken


Java Closures and Lambda introduces you to significant new changes to the Java language coming out of what is termed Project Lambda. These new changes make their debut in Java 8, and their highlight is the long-awaited support for lambda expressions in the Java language. YouŽll learn to write lambda expressions and use them to create functional interfaces and default methods for evolving APIs, among many other uses.

The changes in Java 8 are significant. Syntax and usage of the language are changed considerably with the introduction of closures and lambda expressions. This book takes you through these important changes from introduction to mastery. Through a set of clear examples, youŽll learn to refactor existing code to take advantage of the new language features. YouŽll learn what those features can do for you, and when they are best applied. YouŽll learn to design and write new code having these important new features in mind from the very beginning.

Clearly explains the fantastic benefits resulting from Project Lambda
Explains the syntax and IDE support for the new features
Shows how to streamline your code by bringing some of the benefits of functional programming to the Java language
Illustrates parallelism in closures through Stream and Spliterator objects
Explains API evolution by adding methods to existing interfaces without breaking existing interface implementations, a technique addressing potential multiple inheritance issues

Chapter 1: Java 8: ItŽs a Whole New Java

Chapter 2: Understanding Lambdas in Java 8

Chapter 3: LambdaŽs Domain: Collections and Streams

Chapter 4: File I/O with Lambdas

Chapter 5: Data Access with Lambdas

Chapter 6: Lambda Concurrency

Chapter 7: Legacy to Lambdas

Chapter 8: Lambdas in Java ByteCode

Appendix A: Contrasting Paradigms
Robert Fischer is a software developer, open source software contributor, technical commentator, and engineering manager. He has consulted, written, and spoken broadly on technical topics including concurrency, JVM bytecode, Groovy, Grails, and Gradle, and functional programming. Robert has a Masters of Divinity degree from Duke University, works as the VP of Engineering at Webonise Lab, and lives in Durham, North Carolina with his wife, dog, and baby girl.