Congratulations, guys!

I very much look forward to reading this book.


Cheers,
David



On Thu, 2007-07-26 at 22:55 +0200, Martijn Dashorst wrote:
> Eelco and I are really happy to announce the availability of our first
> two chapters of our forthcoming book "Wicket in Action".
> 
> Chapter 1 is a FREE(!) download for users that subscribe to our new
> Apache Wicket user list. First send a message to
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] and then proceed to download chapter
> 1 here:
> 
>     http://manning.com/dashorst
> 
> The book is available through the Manning Early Access Program (MEAP),
> which means that you can buy the book right now, and get access to new
> chapters as soon as Eelco and I have finished them. When the book is
> finished you will receive the full blown marked up e-version, or if
> you prefer (and at some extra cost) in a dead tree format.
> 
> Chapters 1 and 3 are already available, with chapters 2 and 4
> following shortly (within one or two weeks). The other chapters will
> be available a bit later, as they still need to be converted from the
> Wicket 2.0 constructor change back to Wicket 1.3 (yes we suffer too
> from our mistakes!)
> 
> Wicket in Action is an authoritative, comprehensive guide for Java
> developers building Wicket-based web applications. This book starts
> with an introduction to Wicket's structure and components, and moves
> quickly into examples of Wicket at work. Written by two of the
> project's earliest and most authoritative experts, this book shows you
> both the "how-to" and the "why" of Wicket. As you move through the
> book, you'll learn to use and customize Wicket components, how to
> interact with other technologies like Spring and Hibernate, and how to
> build rich, Ajax-driven features into your applications.
> 
> Here is the full list of chapters for Wicket in Action:
> 
>  1 What is Wicket? (MEAP, FREE)
>  2 The architecture of Wicket
>  3 Setting up a Wicket project (MEAP)
>  4 Building a cheesy Wicket application
>  5 Understanding models
>  6 Using basic components
>  7 Using forms for data entry
>  8 Composing your pages
>  9 Creating custom components
> 10 Creating rich components
> 11 Authorization and authentication
> 12 Working with resources
> 13 Localization and internationalization
> 14 Database driven applications
> 15 Putting your Wicket application in production
> 16 Component index
> 
> We hope you will enjoy this book!
> 
> Eelco Hillenius
> Martijn Dashorst


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