1-800-THE-TREE (1-800-843-8733)
 

Building Java Enterprise Applications with Design Patterns: Hands-On

 
Course: 318     Type: Hands-On Training     Duration: 4 Days

Quick Enroll    

You Will Learn How To
  • Architect Java EE applications using industry-recognized best practices
  • Create flexible and powerful designs for core business logic
  • Design a data layer that manages transactions and optimizes queries
  • Centralize control logic in the Web presentation tier using Java EE patterns
  • Compare the designs of popular Java EE frameworks and choose the right one for your projects
  • Build software that can evolve in response to changing requirements

Course Benefits
The wide variety of Java enterprise technologies presents many challenges to designing an effective Java system. Java EE design patterns help by providing best practices, design ideas and proven techniques. In this course, you gain experience building scalable and maintainable Java EE applications. You learn to apply Java EE patterns to solve commonly recurring design problems.

Who Should Attend
Anyone currently designing or developing Java EE applications. As emphasis is on software design, familiarity with Java code at the level of Course 471, "Java Programming Comprehensive Introduction," is required. Experience with Java EE is beneficial.

Hands-On Training
Throughout this course, you gain experience designing flexible, robust Java EE applications. Exercises include:
  • Writing a simple distributed chat application
  • Implementing a complex Web-based Java EE application
  • Designing and implementing a flexible domain model
  • Refactoring an integration tier using design patterns
  • Employing the Object/Relational mapping capabilities of Hibernate
  • Designing detailed Web application workflows
  • Utilizing the Struts Web Framework

Course 318 Content
Java EE and Design Patterns
Enterprise system design
  • Comparing OO and Java EE patterns
  • The benefits of design patterns in Java EE
Distributed systems development
  • Exploiting remote method invocation
  • Design patterns in distributed systems
Business Tier Patterns
Eliminating inter-tier dependencies
  • Illuminating problems associated with poorly designed tiered architectures
  • Realizing an application's domain model
  • Business Object
  • Application Service
Implementing the business tier
  • Patterns for locating objects
  • Singleton
  • Factory
  • Inversion of Control
Simplifying object interaction
  • Interfacing with adjacent application tiers
  • Selecting scalable middle-tier technologies
  • Reducing the impact of known performance bottlenecks
  • Business Delegate
  • Service Locator
  • Session Facade
Building the Integration Tier
Abstracting the data layer
  • Implementing effective Data Access Objects (DAO)
  • Simplifying JDBC code with iBatis
  • Highlighting difficulties associated with Object/Relational Mapping
  • Exploiting the Domain Store pattern with Hibernate, JDO and EJB 3
  • Refactoring the integration tier using an Abstract DAO Factory
Optimizing database queries
  • Fast Track Access
  • Value List Handler
Managing transactions effectively
  • Handling long-running transactions
  • Comparing optimistic and pessimistic transaction strategies
  • Effecting complex concurrency management with a Transaction Context
Structuring the Web Presentation Tier
Separating control and presentation logic
  • The role of JSPs and servlets
  • Constructing Model View Control (MVC) architectures
  • Front Controller
  • Dispatcher View
  • Service to Worker
Applying Web framework support with Struts
  • Investigating the Struts MVC architecture
  • Planning and implementing complex workflows
  • Handling duplicate form submission with the Synchronizer Token pattern
Localizing disparate logic
  • Improving maintainability of algorithms
  • Intercepting Filter
  • View Helper
  • Composite View
  • Reusing page layout with Tiles
  • Writing modular JSPs
Lightweight Architectures
Reducing coupling in applications
  • Inversion of Control (IoC) design pattern
  • Configuring the Spring IoC container
Promoting code reuse
  • Aspect-Oriented Programming
  • Executing component reuse with Spring
  • Sending e-mail using Spring
  • Utilizing Spring data access templates
Performance and Scalability
Designing for performance
  • Distributed components and performance
  • Measuring runtime performance
  • Optimizing Java EE applications
  • Caching
  • Connection Pooling
Planning for scalability
  • Evaluating design trade-offs in distributed architectures
  • Clustering applications across servers
  • Managing session state effectively

Related Courses

Java is a trademark of Sun Microsystems, Inc.
  
 
Request More Info

Salutation

First Name

Last Name

Company

Zip Code

Country
   Codes
Work Phone

Extension

E-mail

A representative will contact you to follow up your request.
Privacy Statement

Save Up to 40% per course on the Training Passport!

Building Java Enterprise Applications with Design Patterns: Hands-On
Upcoming Dates
Nov 18 - 21, 2008
 Toronto
Dec 9 - 12, 2008
 Washington, DC (Reston, VA)
Feb 10 - 13, 2009
 Ottawa
Feb 24 - 27, 2009
 Toronto
Mar 17 - 20, 2009
 Atlanta
May 26 - 29, 2009
 Toronto
Jun 16 - 19, 2009
 New York
Jun 29 - Jul 2, 2009
 Washington, DC (Rockville, MD)

Building Java Enterprise Applications with Design Patterns: Hands-On
Bring Learning Tree On-Site

Course Tuition
$ 2,790 Standard Tuition
Tuition with a Savings Plan
$ 1,800 10-Day Pass
$ 1,670 Training Passport
$ 1,700 Premium-Pass
$ 2,200 Voucher 10-Pack
$ 2,515 Alumni Gold Discount
$ 2,484 Government Discount
 

 

Building Java Enterprise Applications with Design Patterns: Hands-On
Building Java Enterprise Applications with Design Patterns: Hands-On
Course participants designing high-performance applications using Java EE patterns.
The most recent 100 evaluations scored this course at:

  (3.66/4.00)


CPE 23 Credits 2 Hour(s) College Credit
Customer Service or Enroll: 1-800-843-8733