Book Image

The Java Workshop

By : David Cuartielles, Andreas Göransson, Eric Foster-Johnson
Book Image

The Java Workshop

By: David Cuartielles, Andreas Göransson, Eric Foster-Johnson

Overview of this book

Java is a versatile, popular programming language used across a wide range of industries. Learning how to write effective Java code can take your career to the next level, and The Java Workshop will help you do just that. This book is designed to take the pain out of Java coding and teach you everything you need to know to be productive in building real-world software. The Workshop starts by showing you how to use classes, methods, and the built-in Collections API to manipulate data structures effortlessly. You’ll dive right into learning about object-oriented programming by creating classes and interfaces and making use of inheritance and polymorphism. After learning how to handle exceptions, you’ll study the modules, packages, and libraries that help you organize your code. As you progress, you’ll discover how to connect to external databases and web servers, work with regular expressions, and write unit tests to validate your code. You’ll also be introduced to functional programming and see how to implement it using lambda functions. By the end of this Workshop, you’ll be well-versed with key Java concepts and have the knowledge and confidence to tackle your own ambitious projects with Java.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)

Parsing HTML Data

An HTML document looks something like the following, but usually with a lot more content:

<!doctype html>
<html lang="en">
    <head>
        <title>Example Document</title>
    </head>
    <body>
        <p>A man, a plan, a canal. Panama.</p>
    </body>
</html>

HTML structures a document into a tree-like format, as shown in this example by indentation. The <head> element appears inside the <html> element. The <title> element appears inside the <head> element. An HTML document can have many levels of hierarchy.

Note

Most web browsers provide an option to view a page's source. Select that and you'll see the HTML for the page.

When you run a GET request from a Java application, you need...