Conventions Used in This Book
There are some conventions we'll use that you should
know about. When we've added a new piece of code and
are discussing it, it'll appear in bold face, and
when there's more code to come,
you'll see three dots. Here's what
that looks like:
Listener listener = new Listener( ) {
public void handleEvent(Event event) {
ToolItem item = (ToolItem)event.widget;
String string = item.getText( );
.
.
.
}
};
We'll also use the standard convention for selecting
menu items in this book; for example, to create a new project in
Eclipse, you use the File New Project menu item.
The following typographical conventions are used in this book:
- Plain text
-
Indicates menu titles, menu options, menu buttons, and keyboard
accelerators.
- Italic
-
Indicates new terms, example URLs, example email addresses, filenames, file
extensions, pathnames, directories, and Unix utilities.
- Constant width
-
Indicates commands, options, switches, variables, types, classes,
namespaces, methods, modules, properties, parameters, values,
objects, events, event handlers, and XML tags.
- Constant width italic
-
Indicates text that should be replaced with user-supplied values.
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This icon signifies a tip, suggestion, or general note.
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This icon indicates a warning or caution.
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