Book Image

Learn Java with Projects

By : Dr. Seán Kennedy, Maaike van Putten
5 (3)
Book Image

Learn Java with Projects

5 (3)
By: Dr. Seán Kennedy, Maaike van Putten

Overview of this book

Learn Java with Projects stands out in the world of Java guides; while some books skim the surface and others get lost in too much detail, this one finds a nice middle ground. You’ll begin by exploring the fundamentals of Java, from its primitive data types through to loops and arrays. Next, you’ll move on to object-oriented programming (OOP), where you’ll get to grips with key topics such as classes, objects, encapsulation, inheritance, polymorphism, interfaces, and more. The chapters are designed in a way that focuses on topics that really matter in real-life work situations. No extra fluff here, so that you get more time to spend on the basics and form a solid foundation. As you make progress, you’ll learn advanced topics including generics, collections, lambda expressions, streams and concurrency. This book doesn't just talk about theory—it shows you how things work with little projects, which eventually add up to one big project that brings it all together. By the end of this Java book, you’ll have sound practical knowledge of Java and a helpful guide to walk you through the important parts of Java.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Part 1: Java Fundamentals
9
Part 2: Object-Oriented Programming
15
Part 3: Advanced Topics

Working with generics

We have been working with generics in this chapter. Generics are flexible and used for (amongst others) collections. We were passing in values to these collections by the specified type between the angle brackets. We can create a collection with a type parameter like this:

List<String> names = new ArrayList<>();

This is because the List interface and the ArrayList class are created with a type parameter (generic). This makes the class a lot more flexible, while still ensuring type safety. Let’s have a look at how this was done before generics to understand why they are so great.

Life before generics – objects

When we didn’t have generics, all collections would have objects. You’d have to manually check to make sure the item in the list was of the type you hoped it was. And if it was, you’d have to cast it to this type to use this, much like this:

List = new ArrayList();list.add("Hello");
list...