The result was delete. If Cunard can't find sufficient sourcing, it doesn't exist. Star Mississippi 16:08, 9 February 2025 (UTC)
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Fails WP: GNG. This book has some passing mentions in university course syllabi and a handful of books and papers, but I struggled to find anything that would establish notability. HyperAccelerated (talk) 15:57, 2 February 2025 (UTC)
The article notes: "On the other hands, the AmbySoft standards are more specified and detailed. The AmbySoft standards have guidelines for variables and parameters, classes, methods and packages. Moreover, they listed some advices for Java code reusability and testing [12]. These standards then published in a book called “The Elements of Java Style” [13]. This book provides a set of rules for Java practitioners to follow. While illustrating these rules with parallel examples of correct and incorrect usage, the book provides a collection of standards, conventions, and guidelines for writing solid Java code which will be easy to understand, maintain, and enhance."
The article notes: "He co-wrote "The Elements of Java Style," a book that mimics the presentation of the Strunk and White classic for writers, "The Elements of Style." He and his cohorts were tired of thumbing through an obtuse, 1,200-page manual for answers about the Java programming language."
The article notes: "The visionary in question was Allan Vermeulen, coauthor of the codehead's classic The Elements of Java Style, and now CTO of the world's largest online retailer, Amazon.com."
The article notes: "Similarly, in the field of computer languages, there have many books (The Elements of Java Style, The Elements of C++ Style, The Elements of UML Style) furnishing a set of rules for writing in a certain language like C++ or Java."