Book Image

Java 11 Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Nick Samoylov, Mohamed Sanaulla
Book Image

Java 11 Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Nick Samoylov, Mohamed Sanaulla

Overview of this book

For more than three decades, Java has been on the forefront of developing robust software that has helped versatile businesses meet their requirements. Being one of the most widely used programming languages in history, it’s imperative for Java developers to discover effective ways of using it in order to take full advantage of the power of the latest Java features. Java 11 Cookbook offers a range of software development solutions with simple and straightforward Java 11 code examples to help you build a modern software system. Starting with the installation of Java, each recipe addresses various problem by explaining the solution and offering insights into how it works. You’ll explore the new features added to Java 11 that will make your application modular, secure, and fast. The book contains recipes on functional programming, GUI programming, concurrent programming, and database programming in Java. You’ll also be taken through the new features introduced in JDK 18.3 and 18.9. By the end of this book, you’ll be equipped with the skills required to write robust, scalable, and optimal Java code effectively.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)

Introduction


Functional programming is the ability to treat a certain piece of functionality as an object and pass it as a parameter or the return value of a method. This feature is present in many programming languages, and Java acquired it with the release of Java 8.  

It avoids creating a class, its object, and managing the object state. The result of a function depends only on the input data, no matter how many times it is called. This style makes the outcome more predictable, which is the most attractive aspect of functional programming.

Its introduction to Java also allows us to improve parallel programming capabilities in Java by shifting the responsibility of parallelism from the client code to the library. Before this, in order to process elements of Java collections, the client code had to acquire an iterator from the collection and organize the processing of the collection.

 

Some of the default methods of Java collections accept a function (an implementation of a functional interface...