Assuming an experienced software developer fluent in many languages, but having not entered the Java world from the ground floor, which single book related to the huge space that is the Java world would you recommend as a decent overview from which further expertise can be developed?

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Effective Java.

http://www.amazon.com/Effective-Java-2nd-Joshua-Bloch/dp/0321356683/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1243023794&sr=8-1

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Why did this get more votes than the other Effective Java answer, which beat it by four months? – Michael Myers Jun 4 '09 at 18:39
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Effective Java by Joshua Bloch. It's freaking good. If you were to chose a single book on programming, in any language, this would be a major candidate.

EDIT: Follow takacsot's advice about using Sun's online introduction. Then buy the Effective Java book. You'll never regret it.

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Bruce Eckel's Thinking in Java:

http://www.mindview.net/Books/TIJ/

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I can't really stand Eckel's writing style. He takes himself way to seriously. – PEZ Jan 11 '09 at 8:48
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This book seemed OK for me until I stumbled over his "The copy constructor" contemplations (2nd edition Appendix A). Apparently He believes that there is no "slicing problem" in C++. But maybe he just does not know C++ :-) – Maxim Vladimirsky Jan 11 '09 at 9:11
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Thinking in Java is too long? It's not "See Jane Run" or something like that but that's kind of a weak version to downvote. Perhaps it's mroe of a book for grown ups. :) – BobbyShaftoe Jan 11 '09 at 19:20
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My situation was similar to yours. I tried a couple of different books and settled on Thinking in Java by Bruce Eckel.

It assumes you know basic programming and some programming language terminology.

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No book is needed. My personal favorite is the java tutorial on http://java.sun.com. That is more than enough.

EDIT: Tutorial link: http://download.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/

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How about Java in a nutshell by David Flanagan. I really like his style of writing and explanation.

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There is, but at 1254 pages, it ought to be renamed 'Java In A Very Big Nutshell'! – Luke Woodward Jan 11 '09 at 12:44
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Robocode. I know, it's not a book. But it's a damn good way to learn Java and have really fun while at it. You'll find wiki resources at that link.

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Rather than third the excellent recommendations for "Effective" and "Thinking", I'll add "Java Concurrency In Practice" by Brian Goetz. And "Pro Spring" because I think Spring is terrific.

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"The Java Programming Language" written by one of its inventors (James Gosling).

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I believe that Java is such a big platform that no single book can cover it all.

If you need to learn object orientation, the Head First Java book does it really well.

If you need to learn the Java runtime library (which is biiig) I'd suggest wading through the Java Tutorials from Sun.

If you need a good cookbook reference http://www.exampledepot.com/ is really nice (and is printed in a book too).

The most important thing is, however, experience. Code stuff :) Project Euler http://projecteuler.net/ has a lot of simple and challenging problems and most likely have some you'd like to do.

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Head first java book by Kathy Siera & Bert Bates.All the books in head first series are very very good.

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This may be ancient now days, but I really liked Thinking in Java. It was a number of years ago but was freely available.

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Just to complete the list, a good first Java book could also be Java How To Program.

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Has anyone read Introduction to Java Programming by Y.Daniel Liang? It's what I use, and it's quite a good book with plenty of detail.

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Learning Java by Niemeyer and Knudsen. (O'Reilly rules!!!!)

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Effective Java, second edition. The second edition covers generics and other features added in the 1.5 language revision.

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You might consider reading the Java Language Specification, it is quite readable as specifications go.

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Lots of answers here point to great books about Java topics (concurrency, best practices, etc), but coming from C/C++ you're going to need to learn two things:

  • Solid object oriented analysis and design (C doesn't support OO, and most C++ projects don't do objects in the same way that Java does objects.)
  • The Java language itself

The best books I've found for this are:

At some point rather quickly in your Java progression, you're going to have to start "getting" OO design patterns (especially if you're not used to thinking that way.) These two might help (but ultimately only experience will really do the trick):

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Object First With Java : A Practical Introduction Using BlueJ

Depending on experience this book is a brilliant introduction to both Java and Object Orientation.

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I think your quest for a SINGLE book would be a little difficult :)

Assuming you are an experienced developer, you probably need some resource that gives you a starting point for various things you might be interested in. For this, I would recommend the InformIT Java reference section.

And for quick access to java code snippets, I would recommend the excellent Java2S site.

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As you have previous programming experience, and thus don't need an introduction to control structures, object orientation etc, I would recommend Java Precisely, which is a very concise reference to most of the Java langauge.

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I'd suggest the free online training courses from Sang Shin on JavaPassion.com with or without homework, just how you need it.

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Java Concurrency in Practice is excellent, assuming you're interested in concurrency. It assumes quite a bit of prior knowledge about Java though so as suggested should probably be a companion to some of the other recommendations (TIJ, EJ etc).

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5 intermediate to advanced I follow and recommend are Pragmatic Programmer (Thomas,Hunt) Applying UML and Patterns (Larman) Computer Algorithms (Baase, Van Gelder)
Object-Oriented Software Engineering (Dutoit,Bruegge) Computer Graphics (Baker,Hearn)

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In addition to Effective Java and JCIP.

The Java Power Tools book

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