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The Definitive Guide to Lift: A Scala-Based Web Framework (Expert's Voice in Open Source)
 
 
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The Definitive Guide to Lift: A Scala-Based Web Framework (Expert's Voice in Open Source) [Paperback]

Derek Chen-Becker (Author), Tyler Weir (Author), Marius Danciu (Author)
1.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

1430224215 978-1430224211 May 15, 2009 1

Lift is a Scala based Web application framework, for being productive and useful with Scala. It takes Scala out of academia, and puts it in the real world, making Scala quite pragmatic as this functional programming language continues to grow.

Exploring Lift will be the first Lift book to market, and endorsed by the Lift Founder/Lead David Pollak.


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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Derek Chen-Becker is committer on the Lift project. He is a senior network engineer for a large company. He’s been doing software development for over 14 years, with 12 years of Java experience. He started working with Scala 2 years ago and has been working heavily with Lift since version 0.2 came out.

Marius Danciu spent the past 6 years architecting, designing and leading development of highly scalable server side applications based on J(2)EE platforms. Most applications were based on the data synchronization techniques (based on SyncML OMA standard) and adjacent technologies. For more then an year Marius is a committer to LiftWeb framework contributing with design and implementation of various features in the framework

Tyler Weir is a committer on Lift, and started his career working on compilers at IBM. He moved on to help start Varicent Software as a developer and a manager. He has just co-founded an independent development company, RoboBoogie Studios, building web and iPhone apps.  He has been using Lift since version 0.3.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 244 pages
  • Publisher: Apress; 1 edition (May 15, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1430224215
  • ISBN-13: 978-1430224211
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 7.6 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.9 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 1.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,137,946 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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40 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars great authors, no value provided by the editor/publisher, June 28, 2009
This review is from: The Definitive Guide to Lift: A Scala-Based Web Framework (Expert's Voice in Open Source) (Paperback)
Five stars for the authors, and zero star (if that was possible) for the publisher.

This book is a rip-off. The authors have done a great work but the publisher has provided no value except putting the book on paper. No index! The appendices mentionned in the text are missing from the book!

Also, the title is a blatant lie, 'The Definitive Guide to Lift: A Scala-based Web Framework' is just a snapshot of an ongoing work. If Lift seems mostly stable, the book needs more work. Nothing definitive here even if the authors have done a great work.

The up to date pdf is available on the web with a more modest title "exploring lift". This is the first apress book I bought and probably the last. Shame on apress.

You need to know scala to read the either the book or the pdf. Lift seems a great framework.
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26 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars love lift, hate this book, October 5, 2009
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This review is from: The Definitive Guide to Lift: A Scala-Based Web Framework (Expert's Voice in Open Source) (Paperback)
This book by itself has made me feel dubious about Apress books. I'm familiar with the authors' work through the lift mailing list and can't see how they let Apress publish this in the state it's in. Perhaps they had no choice in the matter. Wait for another book. In the mean time use online resources. As for me, I'm going to throw my copy in the recycling bin even though I could return it. I refuse to inflict this book on someone else.
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Don't buy it, not worth it., January 23, 2011
This review is from: The Definitive Guide to Lift: A Scala-Based Web Framework (Expert's Voice in Open Source) (Paperback)
DON'T BUY.. NO.. DON'T READ IT!

Although English is not my primary language, as an senior software engineer, I've had no problem to read a computer/programming book since 1995 until I met this book.

Primarily, I am a C/C++/Python developer (design a library/module, and implements it). I could write a XML parser from scratch in C/Python, I can write elisp code in Emacs. But have no knowledge on Java/Erlang/Php/Perl/Ruby. I just finished reading "Programming in Scala" by Martin Odersky and others. I must admit, that it was a great/great book. I can't remember that if I had another book that gives me so much joy like Martin's one.

Back to the point,

In my opinion, this book is not an introduction/tutorial for Lift framework, it's just memo/note for the author himself.

I want to ask to the author, "please, don't write new book in this writing style" and the publisher, "please don't publish new book in this writing style ever!" I read a "Practical Common Lisp" from Apress and had a good impression on the publisher until I read ths book.

I expect this book has at least of the quality and style of "Django Tutorial" in Django's site. Am I expecting too much? No. I think not. At least Django people provide it freely in their website. If the author want to earn money from this book, at least it should contain better contents than what Django turial provided.

In Chapter 1, you'll learn how to *download* "hello, world" type of Lift project. I mean "download", not "write".

In Chapter 2, this book starts a small lift project (called PocjetChange), and shows you several code blocks and explains what the block does. Still, it does not show the whole context, so that once read, you'll know what the lift does in those code blocks, but you'll not learn how to create even simple lift project.

In Chapter 3. you'll learn that Lift has a templates, URL rewrite, Snippets, etc. Again, you'll see several lift code blocks but you cannot get the whole picture as a project.

Whenever I finished to read a chapter, this question rings in my head:
"Okay, now I know several features of Lift, but how can I start/write from the scratch?".

After reading ~Chapter 3, I wanted to give up. But there are no good Lift tutorials nor a book other than this crap, so I have no other choice so far. *sigh*.

For me, reading this book is just like... to force a person to read a Linux kernel book, who has no knowledge of C/OS/Unix/Linux. Or reading a man page of X functions without reading a proper X programming books.

If you just finished to read a Scala book, and want to learn Lift framework, don't buy it. More speicifically, don't read it, it will not save your time, it will make you more confused, and more dazed.

I guess, that this book is for Lift people, those who already accustomed to use Lift, in case of not to forget how to use it, or for a manger with technical background, who doesn't need to write Lift framework him/herself, if they want to know what Lift provides/ and what Lift does not provide.

Since I am not very comfortable to write something in English, even I bought a lot of computer books from Amazon, I had almost no experience writing a review. Only this book make me mad enough to write a review in English.

There is on-going new book, "Lift in Action" by Timothy Perrett from Manning Publications. (See [...]) Only purchased customers can read the pre-published material, I can't say anything. But I read several comments from others in their forum that it fills the gap between Scala and Lift. I'm expecting that book now.




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