JPA with Hibernate Training in Casper
We offer private customized training for groups of 3 or more attendees.
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Course Description |
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This course offers a comprehensive and detail-oriented treatment of
Hibernate 4.0 and the Java Persistence API (JPA) 2.0 for developers
interested in implementing persistence tiers for enterprise
applications. We cover JPA basics including simple object/relational
concepts and annotations, persistence contexts and entity managers, and
configuration via persistence.xml. We get a good grounding in the Java
Persistence Query Language (JPQL) and take advantage of a prepared JPQL
query console to explore the two schemas on which the course's case
studies are based. The course then moves into advanced topics including
JPA-2.0 mapping options, the Criteria API, lifecycle hooks, JSR-303
validation, locking, and caching. Students will complete the course with
a firm understanding of JPA architecture and plenty of hands-on exercise
in entity mapping, persistence operations, and JPQL. Course software
includes two schemas: a fairly simple human-resources model (6 tables,
253 rows) for early chapters and a more sophisticated pharmacy schema
(14 tables, 4255 rows) for the latter half of the course. The course
supports either the Derby or Oracle RDBMS. Derby is bundled with the
course software and is pre-configured; a script is included to change
over to Oracle configurations for all exercises and schema-creation
scripts are available for both.
Course Length: 4 Days
Course Tuition: $1690 (US) |
Prerequisites |
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A strong Java programming background is essential for this course. Knowledge of relational database concepts and SQL is recommended. Prior experience with JDBC will be a plus but is not required. |
Course Outline |
Chapter 1. Introduction to JPA
Chapter 2. Object/Relational Mapping
Chapter 3. Entity Managers
Chapter 4. JPQL
Chapter 5. Advanced Mappings
Chapter 6. The Criteria API
Chapter 7. Lifecycle and Validation
Chapter 8. Locking and Caching
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Complimentary Skills to have along with Java Programming
- If you are an experienced Java developer, learning a complimentary language to Java should come much more naturally. As an example JetBrains recently created the Kotlin programming language which is officially supported by Google for mobile development. Kotlin compiles to Java bytecode and runs on the JVM; it's purported to address many of Java's shortcomings... |