Java Programming Training Course | Learn to Code Java (original) (raw)

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Duration: 5 days

Price: Contact us for pricing

Students Will Learn

Course Description

This hands on Java programming course introduces experienced programmers to Java™ technology and Java programming techniques. The Java platform provides an object-oriented, portable and robust framework for application development. Included are core language concepts including fundamental data types, flow control, and standard function libraries. The course emphasizes object oriented programming and modular design to support distributed development environments. Included are the design of classes and objects, inheritance and polymorphism, and the details about creating programs for use on a distributed network, with emphasis on JSP, Servlets, and JDBC.The course also includes coverage of the Java Collections API, fundamental I/O, exceptions, and exception handling.

The Java training course is designed to leverage the participants' existing programming skills and to highlight the new and extended features of the Java programming framework as compared to other common languages. Comprehensive hands on exercises are integrated throughout to reinforce learning and develop real competency.

Students who do not already possess fundamental programming skills should attend the Learning to Program with Java course rather than this course.

Course Prerequisites

Basic programming skills in a structured language. Knowledge and experience with Object-Oriented Design (OOD) is helpful, but not required when learning to code Java.

Course Overview

Introduction to Java Cornerstones of the Java Platform Java Advantages The Java Programming Language The Java Virtual Machine (JVM) Core Java Libraries Extension Libraries Developing Software Using Java Applications, Applets, Web Components Java SE, Java EE, Java ME Installing the JDK Compiling and Running Java from the Command Line The main() Method package and import Statements JAR Files Class Loading and CLASSPATH Online API Documentation JDK Tools Java Integrated Development Environments (IDEs)
Java Syntax Fundamentals Comments Identifiers Reserved Words Classes Statements and Blocks Variables, Constants, Literals Scope of Variables Methods Method Overloading Static Members Static Import Naming Conventions Data Types and Operators Primitive Types Boolean, Integer, Floating-Point and Character Types Unicode Characters and Strings Type Conversion and Casting Expressions and Operators Arithmetic Operators Increment/Decrement Operators Division and Remainder Operators Assignment Operators Relational Comparison and Logical Operators Conditional Operator Bitwise Operators Order of Evaluation Operator Precedence and Associativity
Flow of Control if/else Statement Combining ifs while and do/while Loops for Loop and Loop Counters break and continue Break to Labeled Loops switch Statement return Statement Exit Status Using Java Classes and Objects Classes as Data Types Objects and References Memory in the JVM Object Initialization Objects as Arguments to Methods Objects as Return Values Garbage Collection Primitive Wrapper Classes - Integer, Double, etc. Autoboxing and Unboxing
Strings String Manipulation StringBuffer and StringBuilder Simple Number/String Conversion Arrays Declaring and Allocating Arrays Multi-Dimensional Array Array Literals The java.util.Arrays Class Command-Line Arguments Enhanced for Loop Arrays as Method Arguments Variable-Length Arglists (varargs) Autoboxing and varargs
Developing Java Classes Object-Oriented (OO) Concepts Methods, Member Variables Accessing Members Tight Encapsulation Access Control Modifiers Constructors and Finalizer Using this Class Variables - Static Members and Static Blocks Instance Variables Local Variables Variables and Initialization Inner Classes Anonymous Classes JavaBeans Driver Classes Inheritance Extending Java Classes Accessing Superclass Constructors and Members Overriding Methods Abstract CLasses and Methods Polymorphism Overriding Methods of java.lang.Object equals(), toString(), hashCode() Final Classes and Methods Multiple Inheritance Interfaces Casting Object References Documenting Classes with the javadoc Utility Unit Testing
Type Safety Annotations Java SE Built-In Annotations Defining New Annotations Enumerated Types Constants and Constrained Values Defining and Declaring enums enum Values enums and switch Statements values() and valueOf() Generic Classes Generic Type Parameters Using Type Parameters inClass, Variable and Method Declarations Using a Generic Class Bounded Type Parameters The Collections Framework The java.util Package Container Objects Arrays as Containers Legacy Container Classes - Vector, Hashtable, Enumeration Legacy Container Generic Forms Collections Interfaces - Collection, List, Set, SortedSet Map Interfaces - Map<K,V> Coding to the Interface List, Set, Queue and Map<K,V> implementations Iterating Collections with the Iterator Interface Collections and the Enhanced for Loop Choosing the Correct Implementation and Interface The java.util.Collections Utility ClassSorting Using the Comparable Interface
Exceptions and Exception Handling The Throwable Hierarchy: Error, RuntimeException and Checked Exception Methods that Throw Exceptions Handling Exceptions with try-catch-finally Blocks Application-Defined Exceptions Throwing an Exception Assertions Enabling Assertions at Run-Time Basic Input and Output (I/O) The java.io Package Using Stream Classes Combining Streams flush() and close() Console Input and Output Navigating the File System File Streams Character File Input and Output Reader and Writer Interfaces BufferedReader and BufferedWriter Binary File I/O - DataOutputStream and DataInputStream Object Streams - ObjectInputStream and ObjectOutputStream Serialization and Versioning Random Access Files Formatted Input and Output Formatter Format specifiers, printf() and format() java.text Classes for Formatting Dates, Numbers, Currencies Input with Scanner
Network Programming The java.net Package IP Addresses and Port Numbers Client/Server Socket Programming URL and URLConnection Classes Communicating with Web Servers HTTP GET and POST Operations Posting to a Server-Side Program Threads Life and States of a Thread Creating and Starting a Thread java.lang.Runnable and java.lang.Thread Stopping a Thread Inter-Thread Communication Thread-Safe Access to Shared Objects and Variables Synchronized Code Sleeping Interrupting a Blocked Thread wait(), notify(), notifyAll() Example Thread Scheduling Thread Groups Writing a Multithreaded Server
Java Database Connectivity The java.sql Package JDBC Architecture and Drivers SQL Exceptions DriverManager, Connection, Statement and ResultSet Interfaces Examining Database MetaData Basic Query and Update Improving Performance with PreparedStatement and CallableStatement Interfaces JDBC Transaction Management Java Web Applications Java Enterprise Edition Java EE Application Servers Web Application Directory and WAR files Deploying a Web Application - The web.xml File Servlet Architecture The javax.servlet Package Servlet Classes and Interfaces Writing a Servlet HttpServletRequest and HttpServletResponse Handling HTML Forms Retrieving Request Parameters
JavaServer Pages (JSPs) JSP Lifecycle Elements of a JSP Directives, Declarative, Scriptlets Writing a JSP Objects Available in a JSP Repeated content in JSPs Translation-Time and Request-Time Includes Using JavaBeans in a JSP Session Management Mixing JSPs and Servlets Installing and Using Tag Libraries The JSP taglib Directive The Tag Library Descriptor

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Reviews

Overall a very useful, comprehensive Java bootcamp. The instructor was very knowledgeable and approachable. The materials were well organized and insightful. I will be recommending this course to my colleagues. Thank you!
— C.Q., Booz Allen Hamilton


This class was all I hoped for and more! I didn't expect to learn as much as I did in such a short period of time. Leaving this class I am confident that my future experiences with the Java programming language will be productive and effective.
— K.B., Marshall University


I enjoyed the instructors teaching. He was willing to address scenarios specific to my current Java projects at the office. I found the course very helpful in understanding Java terminology and concepts. I feel prepared to continue using and learning Java on my own.
— W.M., Bible Study Fellowship