Accessibility
Bruce Eckel

Bruce Eckel

mindview.net

James Ward

James Ward

Adobe

Created:
7 February 2007
Modified:
19 April 2007
User Level:
Intermediate
Products:
Flex

Video Tutorial: Creating an expressive application using Flex, Hibernate, and XFire

In this screen-capture tutorial, follow along as renowned Java author Bruce Eckel and Adobe's James Ward pair up to create an expressive application use Adobe Flex, Hibernate, and XFire.

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Video length (9:47 minutes)

Get started using Flex

Flex Builder 2 (free Flex 2 SDK included)

Free Flex 2 SDK (Included with Flex Builder 2)

Flex Data Services 2

Photographer application sample files:

About the authors

Bruce Eckel is the author of numerous books and articles about computer programming. He gives frequent lectures and seminars for computer programmers, and was a founding member of the ANSI/ISO C++ standard committee. His best known works are Thinking in Java and Thinking in C++, aimed at programmers with little object-oriented programming experience. Most reviewers consider these books to be better written and more pedagogic than most introductory texts on Java or C++. He has since made both books available for all to download freely. However, his recent book, Thinking in Java, Fourth Edition, is no longer available in a free, electronic form.

James Ward is a Technical Evangelist for Flex at Adobe and Adobe's JCP representative to JSR 286, 299, and 301. Much like his love for climbing mountains he enjoys programming because it provides endless new discoveries, elegant workarounds, summits and valleys. His adventures in climbing have taken him many places. Likewise, technology has brought him many adventures, including: Pascal and Assembly back in the early '90s; Perl, HTML, and JavaScript in the mid '90s; then Java and many of its frameworks beginning in the late '90s. Today he primarily uses Flex to build beautiful front ends for Java based back ends. Prior to working at Adobe, James built a rich marketing and customer service portal for Pillar Data Systems. James Ward's blog can be found at www.jamesward.org.