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Mastering Netbeans

Mastering Netbeans

By : David Salter
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Mastering Netbeans

Mastering Netbeans

5 (1)
By: David Salter

Overview of this book

With the increasing complexity of software development and the abundance of tools available, learning your IDE in-depth will instantly increase your developer productivity. NetBeans is the only IDE that can be downloaded with Java itself and provides you with many cutting edge features not readily available with many IDEs. The IDE also provides a great set of tools for PHP and C/C++ developers. It is free and open source and has a large community of users and developers around the world. This book will teach you to ace NetBeans IDE and make use of it in creating Java business and web services. It will help you to become a proficient developer and use NetBeans for software development. You will learn effective third-party interaction and enable yourself for productive database development. Moving on, you will see how to create EJB projects and write effective and efficient web applications. Then you will learn how to use Swing and manage and configure a relational database. By the end of the book, you will be able to handle external services such as databases, Maven repositories, and cloud providers, and extend your NetBeans when you require more from your IDE.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
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11
Index

Java Swing applications


Swing is Java's lightweight widget toolkit for creating desktop applications. When Java was first released, the Abstract Window Toolkit (AWT) was the standard. This was a platform-independent API where each component that was drawn by AWT depended upon the corresponding native component. AWT was the standard GUI toolkit for Java until J2SE 1.2 was released. With this release of Java, Swing was promoted as the GUI toolkit of choice. Swing provides many advantages over AWT, most particularly that it does not depend upon native GUI components like its predecessor AWT did. In fact, all the standard Swing components are all written in pure Java and do not depend upon native controls. Swing is, therefore, considered a lightweight GUI toolkit in comparison to AWT.

Swing support has been available within NetBeans since version 3. Swing support was completely rewritten in NetBeans 5 with the addition of project Matisse. This project was the new GUI builder that was added to...

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