Book Image

Java EE Development with Eclipse

By : Deepak Vohra
Book Image

Java EE Development with Eclipse

By: Deepak Vohra

Overview of this book

<p>Java EE is the industry standard on enterprise computing and Oracle WebLogic Server is the most comprehensive platform for enterprise applications. The book combines Java EE with WebLogic Server in the most commonly used Java IDE, the Eclipse IDE 3.7.<br /><br />"Java EE Development with Eclipse" is the only book on Eclipse IDE for Java EE Developers. The book is a practical guide for using the most commonly used Java EE technologies and frameworks in Eclipse IDE. Sample applications are available in downloadable format and may be customized to meet requirements. Oracle Enterprise Pack for Eclipse 12c, an enhancement to Eclipse IDE, providing additional project facets and an integrated support for Oracle WebLogic Server is used.<br /><br />"Java EE Development with Eclipse" is based on developing applications with some of the commonly used technologies using the project facets in Eclipse 3.7 and its enhancement Oracle Enterprise Pack for Eclipse 12c. <br /><br />The book starts with a discussion on EJB 3.0 database persistence with Oracle database XE and Oracle WebLogic Server. JAXB is discussed in the context of bi-directional mapping between XML and Java. A generic web project is developed for PDF and Excel spread sheet reports. JavaServer Faces, the most commonly used view component in web applications is discussed for developing a data table. Facelets, which was integrated into JSF with 2.0 version is discussed in the context of templating. ADF Faces components are used to develop another user interface (UI) application. Web services are discussed with JAX-WS and JAX-RS technologies. Java EE frameworks Ajax and Spring are also discussed.</p>
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Java EE Development with Eclipse
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Summary


In this chapter we discussed the O/X mapping provided by the JAXB 2.x framework. We discussed the advantages of JAXB 2.x over JAXB 1.0. We created a JAXB project. We created an XML Schema and generated JAXB classes from the XML Schema using JAXB Schema compilation. Subsequently, we marshalled an XML document from a DOM document object, and also unmarshalled an XML document using the compiled Java classes. We also mapped an annotated Java class to an XML document using the annotations API and to an XML Schema using the built-in support for schema from JAXB classes.

In the next chapter we will create PDF and Excel reports using the JasperReports reporting engine in a Dynamic Web Module project. We will use WebLogic Server to deploy and run the web project to create JasperReports reports.