Book Image

Transitioning to Java

By : Ken Fogel
Book Image

Transitioning to Java

By: Ken Fogel

Overview of this book

This comprehensive guide will help non-Java developers already using different languages transition from their current language to all things Java. The chapters are designed in a way that re-enforces a developer’s existing knowledge of object-oriented methodologies as they apply to Java. This book has been divided into four sections, with each section touching upon different aspects that’ll enable your effective transition. The first section helps you get to grips with the Java development environment and the Maven build tool for modern Java applications. In the second section, you’ll learn about Java language fundamentals, along with exploring object-oriented programming (OOP) methodologies and functional programming and discovering how to implement software design patterns in Java. The third section shows you how to code in Java on different platforms and helps you get familiar with the challenges faced on these platforms. In the fourth section, you’ll find out how you can manage and package your Java code. By the end of this Java programming book, you’ll have learned the core concepts of Java that’ll help you successfully transition from a different language to Java.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
1
Part 1:The Java Development Environment
5
Part 2:Language Fundamentals
15
Part 3:GUI and Web Coding in Java
19
Part 4:Packaging Java Code

Jakarta Faces Application

Jakarta Faces, now just called Faces, is one of two client rendering techniques available in web applications. The other is Jakarta Server Pages (JSP). In this chapter, we will examine a Faces web application that, like our Swing and JavaFX examples, allows you to perform three common finance calculations.

The JSP rendering approach permits the placement of Java source code on an HTML page. Before a JSP page can be rendered, the file is converted into a servlet by the application server. If you have 50 JSP pages, then there will be 50 servlets on the application server. The typical approach in designing an application is to use JSP for rendering by mixing standard HTML, expression language code to access data or call Java methods, and Java source code. These files end with a .jsp extension. While you can do processing on the page, the common approach is to have a JSP page call upon a servlet for processing and to decide which JSP page to return to the browser...