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JasperReports for Java Developers: Create, Design, Format and Export Reports with the world's most popular Java reporting library

JasperReports for Java Developers: Create, Design, Format and Export Reports with the world's most popular Java reporting library
Author: David Heffelfinger
Publisher: Packt Publishing
Category: Book

List Price: $44.99
Buy New: $40.49
You Save: $4.50 (10%)



Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
Sales Rank: 221556

Media: Paperback
Edition: 1
Pages: 344
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3
Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 7.5 x 1.1

ISBN: 1904811906
Dewey Decimal Number: 005
EAN: 9781904811909
ASIN: 1904811906

Publication Date: April 8, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
JasperReports is the world's most popular embeddable Java open source reporting library, providing Java developers with the power to easily create rich print and web reports. This book shows you exactly how to get started, and develop the skills to get the most from JasperReports.

The book steers you through each point of report setup, to creating, designing, formatting, and exporting reports with data from a wide range of datasources, and integrating JasperReports with other Java frameworks.

Starting with the basics of adding reporting capabilities to your application, and creating report templates you will first see how to produce your reports through the use of JRXML files, custom ANT targets, and then see preview them in both the browser and the native browser of JasperReports.

Getting data into your reports is the next step, and you will see how to get data from a range of datasources, not only databases, but XML files, and Java Objects, among others.You will create better looking reports with formatting and grouping, as well as adding graphical elements to the report. You will export your reports to a range of different formats, including PDF and XML. Creating reports will be made even easier with a walkthrough of the iReport Designer visual designing tool. To round things off, you will see how to integrate your reports with other Java frameworks, using Spring or Hibernate to get data for the report, and Java Server Faces or Struts for presenting the report.

The book covers:

Overview of JasperReports, and what it can do for you
Adding reporting capabilities to your application
Creating and formatting reports
Report layout and design
Working with database datasources
Working with other types of datasource such as arrays, collections, TableModels and XML
Creating subreports
Adding charts and graphics to a report
Working with the iReport report designer
Exporting reports to PDF, Excel spreadsheet or Word document format
Integrating JasperReports with other Java frameworks like Spring, Java Server Faces, Struts, and Hibernate

This book is a concise and practical guide aimed at getting the results you want as quickly as possible. This book is for Java developers who want to create rich reports for either the web or print, and want to get started quickly with JasperReports to do this. No knowledge of JasperReports is presumed, although obviously familiarity with Java, SQL, and XML are assumed where they are required.




Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Heffelfinger Shows us the Yellow Brick Road   April 22, 2007
G. Smetzer (Juneau, Alaska United States)
8 out of 11 found this review helpful

Heffelfinger's book meets all my tests for excellence in technical manuals. First, it addresses a development problem I am having today; and it is the only book on the market - including books and articles published by the vendor - that does so. Other favorable attributes include these: the book is less than 3/4ths of an inch thick, weighs less than a pound; cost less than $50 bucks; and there is more white space than dense text.

Some authors of technical books must think we buy their books in order to better understand and appreciate their verbose writing styles. I did that sort of thing in my literature courses. When I am under the gun to produce bullet-proof code I want the insight and keyboard sequences that get me to user acceptance with the shortest time, and the least grief.

Finally, maybe most important, the book is full of brief, readable, complete, and relevant code. When compiled, the code actually works on my ratty old development machine with a minimum number of obscure error messages. There are many references to needed downloads and sources of information relevant to the topics discussed. The error messages can be resolved with some careful re-reading and re-thinking. Thus do we get through our learning curves. Unlike some technical books, the error messages generated by the code in this one are not black holes where hours of time disappear without ever regurgitating a solution to the problem that caused the error.

My first programming opportunity in college had me using machine language techniques to write a five card inventory program on an IBM 1620 with 4K of magnetic core memory. I followed that up with a couple of years on a Displaywriter. In recent years I've had better equipment, and I've learned how to make Agile XP and use cases a part of my daily life, but youthful and sophisticated users who have grown up with the web want lots of tricky stuff on their pocket-size devices. The problem for old guys like me is that the tricky stuff and the devices themselves were never dreamed of in the late 20th century when I was trying to get my programmer chops, but today's users want the stuff, and they want it now.

So, since I enjoy trying to make this stuff, I have been recently engaged in a massive struggle to figure out how to drag my decades of programming experience with Basic, Visual Basic, MS Access, and client-server architectures into the brave new 21st century world of n-tier, the web, java, open source, and mobile, disconnected data gathering.

On page 25 David H told me, the reader, that I was required to use ANT in order to work the examples in his book. This was not an option. By doing so he has shined a light on the yellow brick road to the geek promised land, and this old geek is now going happily down that road. Five stars for "Jasper Reports for Java Developers."




4 out of 5 stars Finally a good JasperReports Resource   December 15, 2006
R. Spears (Lawrence, KS USA)
5 out of 9 found this review helpful

There is such a dearth of documentation on JasperReports. This is a very nice explanation on how to use it, there a good set of examples.

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