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Guerrilla Oracle: The Succinct Windows Perspective



eBook Information




Guerrilla Oracle: The Succinct Windows Perspective
ISBN  0201750775
Release Date  19 February 2003
Page  496
Category  Oracle
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An introduction to the overall features of Oracle. At the end the reader will have developed a fully functional database, and will have a solid, well-rounded grasp of Oracle. Gets the reader up and running with Oracle quickly. Softcover.

User review
A good Oracle book to start with
I have pondered thru many Oracle books but this one explains the concepts very clearly. I set up Oracle on my computer using the instructions and did all the exercises. I had no problem and learned a lot in a short time.
I would recommend this book for a beginner and then move on to the move advanced Oracle books.

User review
Probably not what you're looking for!
If you are new to Oracle (and this book is obviously geared toward the new user) you might want to stay away from this book. The author does take a step-by-step approach to installing Oracle and creating databases, etc. but the steps are out of order (you're asked to grant users rights to tables that you have not yet created), code fragments are incorrect (table names change throughout examples) and there is very little `meat` to anything.

In nearly every chapter the author suggest that you go to other documentation for further study. I suggest you bypass this book entirely and move on to something more substantive and accurate.

User review
Excellent, if you are a beginner in Oracle
Oralce databse is a great topic. If you are the expert in it, I am sure you can find a job in everywhere.

Under re-enginnering process, most of companies will use database and IT technology to save their labour cost. Oracle becomes the key on the process. However a lot of books in the market are too difficult for beginners. Some of them only explain the idea without examples and practices.

Through this book, you can learn the basic concepts and take some hands-on exercises. Although it is not the best starting reference (more exercises will be much better), I still recommend this book for the one who interest in Oracle.

User review
Cool Perl Debugger book for experienced programmers
`Perl Debugger Pocket Reference` is a relativly short introduction into the command line Perl Debugger (perl -d option). You will find the following main chapters in this book:

- Introductory chapters (partly meta chapters not about the debugger but about good programming)
- Debugger Commands
- Debugger Variables
- Debugging Options
- Debugger Internals, Quick reference, rest

When I bought this book I had hoped for a `,,.Pocket Guide` and not a `,,.Pocket Reference` (deeper coverage). I consider this not an extreme `,,.Pocket Reference` (like e.g. `Perl Pocket Reference`) because this book contains examples for each of the commands and options that it describes. For me examples are the most important part in technical books.

The language, the printing and the index (there is an alphabetic index) are of the usual high O'Reilly standard).

I think that `Perl Debugger Pocket Reference` might be a bit heavy if you never used a command line debugger like gdb or xdb before. This book assumes that you already know what and why you want to do with the debugger, you will be explained WHO to do this with the debugger. PDPR is missing the process model when using a debugger. Personally I would have wished for even more examples and a bit more about when to use a certain feature of the debugger.

For all those poor souls like me that still have to use Perl 5.5, you will not like this book because it explains the cool new features of the Perl 5.8 debugger (differences to Perl 5.6 covered as well) that are missing in Perl 5.5. I hope that I can convince my customer to upgrade to Perl 5.8 to be able to use cool new debugger (especially the w watchpoints will be great).

I will keep this booklet next to my keyboard when I am Perl programming from now on to be able to lookup the Debugger functions that I will need. If you are a Perl programmer like me that does not produce flawless code, I really recommend this book. I will use it again right after finishing this review. Perl debugging will be more fun (for me) from now on.







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