Book Image

Java EE 7 First Look

By : Armel Fabrice NDJOBO
Book Image

Java EE 7 First Look

By: Armel Fabrice NDJOBO

Overview of this book

For several years, the development of robust, scalable, and secured applications was a headache for software companies. They had to use proprietary solutions with non-standard methods. With Java EE, many of these solutions have been standardized, simplified, adapted to the needs of the developer, and made freely available to the community. Thus, it is now possible to develop truly robust, secure, and scalable applications at a lower cost using tools such as: Eclipse, NetBeans, and GlassFish.Java EE 7 First Look is a practical guide which, through the creation of an online pre-registration website, will introduce you to the novelties of Java EE 7 and give you ideas for utilizing them.Giving you an insight on new features introduced in Java EE 7, this book begins with the objectives of Java EE 7 and then covers the new specifications added in Java EE 7. Next, you will move on to the improvements made in APIs and EJBs and how to work with them. You will also learn how to ensure that the quality of data is maintained that has been manipulated by your application and gives you the opportunity to put a small part of AOP (Aspect Oriented Programming) in action.Finally, the book will give you some ideas to realize n-tier applications using the Java EE platform and will also provide some guidance for the integration of your Java EE application to heterogeneous systems with which your application will interact.After reading Java EE 7 First Look, you'll have a good idea about the changes brought in by Java EE 7, as well as how to make the best use of these to build a large-scale application.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)

Bean Validation


The Bean Validation 1.1 Specification was developed under JSR 349. This section just gives you an overview of improvements in the API. The complete document specification (for more information) can be downloaded from http://jcp.org/aboutJava/communityprocess/final/jsr349/index.html.

We are almost at the end of the realization of our online preregistration application. In the previous chapters, we developed the different layers of our application and now we need to validate the data that will be handled by this application.

Validating your data

The Java language provides for Java SE and Java EE developers the Bean Validation Specification, which allows us to express constraints on objects. By default, it offers a small number of constraints (compared to the needs that you may have) called built-in constraints (see the following table). But, it gives you the opportunity to combine these constraints in order to make much more complex constraints (custom constraints) that suit...