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Griffon in Action [Paperback]

Andres Almiray , Danno Ferrin , James Shingler

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Book Description

8 Jun 2012 1935182234 978-1935182238 1

Summary

Griffon in Action is a comprehensive tutorial written for Java developers who want a more productive approach to UI development. After a quick Groovy tutorial, you'll immediately dive into Griffon and start building examples that explore its high productivity approach to Swing development.

About the Technology

You can think of Griffon as Grails for the desktop. It is a Groovy-driven UI framework for the JVM that wraps and radically simplifies Swing. Its declarative style and approachable abstractions are instantly familiar to developers using Grails or JavaFX.

About the Book

Griffon in Action gets you going quickly. Griffon's convention-over-configuration approach requires minimal code to get an app off the ground, so you can start seeing results immediately. You'll learn how SwingBuilder and other Griffon "builders" provide a coherent DSL-driven development experience. Along the way, you'll explore best practices for structure, architecture, and lifecycle of a Java desktop application.

Written for Java developers—no experience with Groovy, Grails, or Swing is required.

Purchase of the print book comes with an offer of a free PDF, ePub, and Kindle eBook from Manning. Also available is all code from the book.

What's Inside
  • Griffon from the ground up
  • Full compatibility with Griffon 1.0
  • Using SwingBuilder and the other "builders"
  • Practical, real-world examples
  • Just enough Groovy

=======================================

Table of Contents

    PART 1 GETTING STARTED
  1. Welcome to the Griffon revolution
  2. A closer look at Griffon
  3. PART 2 ESSENTIAL GRIFFON
  4. Models and binding
  5. Creating a view
  6. Understanding controllers and services
  7. Understanding MVC groups
  8. Multithreaded applications
  9. Listening to notifications
  10. Testing your application
  11. Ship it!
  12. Working with plugins
  13. Enhanced looks
  14. Griffon in front, Grails in the back
  15. Productivity tools


Product details

  • Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Manning Publications; 1 edition (8 Jun 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1935182234
  • ISBN-13: 978-1935182238
  • Product Dimensions: 18.9 x 1.9 x 23.4 cm
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,241,741 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Authors

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Product Description

About the Author

Andres Almiray is a member of the Groovy Swing team, a group of developers in charge of the Swing code and the tasks at the very core of the language. He is a co-founder and project lead of the Griffon framework, and is responsible for FactoryBuilderSupport, JideBuilder, and GraphicsBuilder. Andres is also a frequent conference speaker and Java Champion.

Danno Ferrin is a senior software engineer with experience in numerous UI technologies including Java, Swing, Flex, and JavaScript. He's the co-founder of Griffon, and an active committer to the Groovy language.

James Shingler is the Lead Technical Architect for Big Lots (a nationwide retailer base in Columbus, Ohio), an international speaker, an open source evangelist, and coauthor of Beginning Groovy and Grails (2008). The focus of his career has been using cutting-edge technology to develop IT solutions for the retail, insurance, financial services, and manufacturing industries.


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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars  1 review
4.0 out of 5 stars Java Swing development with Groovy 14 Dec 2012
By Doug Warren - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This book helps Java Swing developers exploit the Griffon framework for web or desktop applications. It thoroughly covers advanced topics, such as MVC design, multithreading, events, testing, packaging, and plugins that are necessary to be successful with these technologies. It also illustrates how Griffon offers similar front-end capabilities to those provided by Grails for back-end web applications, and how those could even be used together.

The book focuses primarily on various advanced features available with Griffon. The examples were quite useful for demonstrating the techniques for each specific technology challenge. Each chapter explores the various features, including covering tips and techniques for various options. They were presented in an evolutionary way, which the reader can create as they proceed through the book. There are Ant build scripts included with all the chapter examples.

I would definitely recommend it for those Java, Swing, or Griffon developers planning to exploit this technology. They might be lost without a guide that helps them know to leverage its capabilities, and this book should help them avoid running into trouble.
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