Book Image

Hands-On Design Patterns with Java

By : Dr. Edward Lavieri
2 (1)
Book Image

Hands-On Design Patterns with Java

2 (1)
By: Dr. Edward Lavieri

Overview of this book

Java design patterns are reusable and proven solutions to software design problems. This book covers over 60 battle-tested design patterns used by developers to create functional, reusable, and flexible software. Hands-On Design Patterns with Java starts with an introduction to the Unified Modeling Language (UML), and delves into class and object diagrams with the help of detailed examples. You'll study concepts and approaches to object-oriented programming (OOP) and OOP design patterns to build robust applications. As you advance, you'll explore the categories of GOF design patterns, such as behavioral, creational, and structural, that help you improve code readability and enable large-scale reuse of software. You’ll also discover how to work effectively with microservices and serverless architectures by using cloud design patterns, each of which is thoroughly explained and accompanied by real-world programming solutions. By the end of the book, you’ll be able to speed up your software development process using the right design patterns, and you’ll be comfortable working on scalable and maintainable projects of any size.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Introducing Design Patterns
4
Section 2: Original Design Patterns
8
Section 3: New Design Patterns

Architectural Patterns - Part II

In the previous chapter, Architectural Patterns Part I, we explored the architectural pattern category and eight specific patterns—blackboard, broker, client-server, event-driven, extract-transform-load, layered, master–slave, and microkernel. Each of these eight architectural patterns was explained along with diagrams.

In this chapter, we will continue our exploration of the architectural patterns. Specifically, we will review the architectural patterns listed next, along with an examination of programming challenges and the architectural patterns to solve them:

  • Microservices pattern
  • Model-view-controller pattern
  • Naked objects pattern
  • Peer-to-peer (P2P) pattern
  • Pipe-filter pattern
  • Serverless pattern
  • Service-oriented pattern
  • Space-based pattern

We will cover the eight architectural patterns in this chapter. They have been...