Book Image

Jakarta EE Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Elder Moraes
Book Image

Jakarta EE Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Elder Moraes

Overview of this book

Jakarta EE is widely used around the world for developing enterprise applications for a variety of domains. With this book, Java professionals will be able to enhance their skills to deliver powerful enterprise solutions using practical recipes. This second edition of the Jakarta EE Cookbook takes you through the improvements introduced in its latest version and helps you get hands-on with its significant APIs and features used for server-side development. You'll use Jakarta EE for creating RESTful web services and web applications with the JAX-RS, JSON-P, and JSON-B APIs and learn how you can improve the security of your enterprise solutions. Not only will you learn how to use the most important servers on the market, but you'll also learn to make the best of what they have to offer for your project. From an architectural point of view, this Jakarta book covers microservices, cloud computing, and containers. It allows you to explore all the tools for building reactive applications using Jakarta EE and core Java features such as lambdas. Finally, you'll discover how professionals can improve their projects by engaging with and contributing to the community. By the end of this book, you'll have become proficient in developing and deploying enterprise applications using Jakarta EE.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

The secret to unsticking your career, your project, and even your life!

Do you feel stuck in your career? I've felt that way, too. Let me tell you a story about a secret that made my career explode.

It was 2002. I was at The American Chamber of Commerce in San Paolo, attending the Sun Tech Days developer conference. The venue was full and I was a little lost.

Maybe "lost" doesn't define my state very well. "Out of place" works much better. After all, I was just a tech newbie in the midst of giants.

I saw some well-known faces—Bruno Souza and Fabio Velloso. "Should I introduce myself?", I thought.

Of course not...who was I? I should leave the guys alone—they must always be busy at conferences such as this.

I read the program and saw that there was a keynote speech taking place in the main room. It looked like it was by someone...