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EJB 3 Developer Guide

EJB 3 Developer Guide

By : Michael Sikora
4.2 (6)
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EJB 3 Developer Guide

EJB 3 Developer Guide

4.2 (6)
By: Michael Sikora

Overview of this book

This book is a fast-paced tutorial that explores the key features of EJB 3 with many accompanying examples. This book is not a complete reference guide, but a concise exploration of EJB 3's core elements. This book is primarily aimed at professional developers who already have a working knowledge of Java. Enterprise architects and designers with a background in Java would also find this book of use. Previous experience of working with Java is essential and knowledge of relational databases is desirable. As this book is an introduction to EJB 3, it is aimed at those who are new to EJB 3. As the new version of EJB is so radically different from the previous version (EJB 2.x), the book is suitable for and should be of interest to those who have had experience working with EJB 2.x. The text makes it clear where the differences between the versions of EJB lie, although they are not explored in detail.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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EJB 3 Developer Guide
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface
1
Annotations and Their Corresponding Packages

Constructor Expressions


By using a constructor in the SELECT clause we can instantiate a Java object with the results of our query. This Java object does not need to be an entity or be mapped onto a database. The class name corresponding to this object must be fully qualified. For example, the query

SELECT NEW ejb30.entity.CustomerRef(
c.firstName, c.lastName, c.referee.name)
FROM Customer c

creates a CustomerRef object which contains a customer's first and last name together with the associated referee name. The following is a partial listing for the CustomerRef class:

package ejb30.entity;
import java.io.Serializable;
public class CustomerRef implements Serializable {
private String firstName;
private String lastName;
private String refereeName;
public CustomerRef() {}
public CustomerRef(String firstName, String lastName,
String refereeName) {
this.firstName = firstName;
this.lastName = lastName;
this.refereeName = refereeName;
}
// getter and setter methods
}

Note the presence of a...

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Programming languages
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EJB 3 Developer Guide
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