Book Image

Oracle JDeveloper 11gR2 Cookbook

By : Nick Haralabidis
Book Image

Oracle JDeveloper 11gR2 Cookbook

By: Nick Haralabidis

Overview of this book

Oracle's Application Development Framework (ADF) for Fusion Web Applications leverages Java EE best practices and proven design patterns to simplify constructing complex web solutions with JDeveloper, and this hands-on, task-based cookbook enables you to realize those complex, enterprise-scale applications. With the help of real-world implementations, practical recipes cover everything from design and construction, to deployment, testing, debugging and optimization. This practical, task-based cookbook takes you, the ADF developer, on a practical journey for building Fusion Web Applications. By implementing a range of real world use cases, you will gain invaluable and applicable knowledge for utilizing the ADF framework with JDeveloper 11gR2. "Oracle JDeveloper 11gR2 Cookbook"ù is a task-based guide to the complete lifecycle of Fusion Web Application development using Oracle JDeveloper 11gR2 and ADF.You will get quickly up and running with concepts like setting up Application Workspaces and Projects, before delving into specific Business Components such as Entity Objects, View Objects, Application Modules and more. Along the way you will encounter even more practical recipes about ADF Faces UI components and Backing Beans, and the book rounds off by covering security, session timeouts and exceptions.With "Oracle JDeveloper 11gR2 Cookbook"ù in hand you will be equipped with the practical knowledge of a range of ready to use implementation cases which can be applied to your own Fusion Web ADF Applications.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Oracle JDeveloper 11gR2 Cookbook
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Overriding attribute validation exceptions


At the ADF-BC layer, built-in validators are stored in the XML metadata definition file with no ability to customize the exception message and/or centralize the application error messages in a single application-wide message bundle file. To overcome this you can extend the oracle.jbo.ValidationException and oracle.jbo.AttrValException classes. Then in your custom entity object implementation class you can override the validateEntity() and setAttributeInternal() methods to throw these custom exceptions instead. Even better, if you have gone through the process of creating framework extension classes (see Setting up BC base classes, Chapter 1, Pre-requisites to Success: ADF Project Setup and Foundations), this functionality can be added to the base entity object framework extension class and thereby used in a generic way throughout the application.

In this recipe, we will extend the oracle.jbo.AttrValException class in order to provide a custom...