Modern Java: Second Edition
Modern Java: Second Edition
Java 17 and the Java Ecosystem
About the Book
Who is this for?
This book is for anyone who wants to learn more about Java programming up to and including Java 17. It helps to have a background in some programming language and a basic understanding of Java.
What is covered?
Java and the JVM platform have made huge strides in the past several years. In Project Lambda, Java got lambda expressions, method-references, and default and static methods on interfaces. Java 9 added modularity, jshell, and Reactive support. Java 10-11 added local variable type inference (var) and Java 12-17 added switch expressions, pattern matching instanceof, multi-line strings, and records. At the same time, many new frameworks have reached full maturity and vastly improved over the previous models for building, testing, and developing web applications.
This book will help you understand:
- The new features released in Java 10-17, such as "var", multi-line strings, and records
- Java 9+, including: Project Jigsaw, JShell, language updates, and Reactive support.
- Java 8+, including: Project Lambda, the new Date-Time API, Streams, default methods, Nashorn, and more.
- Concurrent programming such as Fork/Join, Futures, Promises, Parallel Streams, and RxJava.
- Great web frameworks in Java, such as Spring Boot, Spark, Play, and Ratpack.
- The fundamentals of Groovy and how it can improve your Java projects.
- Testing with JUnit and Spock.
- Building with Maven and Gradle.
- Microservices, REST, Cloud...
- Logback, Hibernate, Guava...
- Much more...
Disclaimer
Java is a registered trademark of Oracle. You can find Java here on Oracle's website.
Bundles that include this book
Table of Contents
-
-
Introduction
- Always be learning
- Who is this book for?
- What is this book about?
- What this book is not about
- Starting Out
-
Introduction
-
Part I: Java
-
Java
- History
- Open-ness
- The Java Ecosystem
-
Java Syntax and Conventions
- Java JDK
- Primitives and Arrays
- Classes
- Properties and Methods
- Comments
- Java 5
- Java 6
-
Java 7
- Language Updates
- Fork/Join
- New IO (nio)
- JVM Benefits
- Performance Benefits
- Backwards Compatibility
-
Idiomatic Java 8: Lambdas, Streams, and Dates
- Lambda Expressions
- Comparisons to Java 7
- Default Methods
- Default and Functional
- Multiple Defaults
- Static Methods on Interface
- Streams
- For Each
- Map/Filter/Reduce
- Parallel Array
- Peek
- Limit
- Sort
- Collectors and Statistics
- Grouping and Partitioning
- Comparisons to Java 7
- Optional
- Nashorn
-
New Date and Time API
- New Classes
- Creation
- Enums
- Clock
- Period and Duration
- Temporal Adjusters
- Instant
- Time Zones
- Backwards Compatibility
-
Java 8 Miscellaneous
- Base64
- No More Permanent Generation
- Annotations on Java Types
- Repeating Annotations
- Functional Programming in Java 8
- Backports
-
Advantages of Java 9
- Language Updates
- Concurrency
- Modularity
- JShell
-
Java 10 and 11
- Local Variable Types
- Lambda Expression Local Variable Types
-
Java 12-17
- Switch Expressions
- Records
- Multiline Strings
- Pattern Matching Instance-of
-
Java
-
Part II: The Java Ecosystem
-
Ecosystem Overview
- Continuous Development and Testing
-
Maven
- What is Maven?
- Using Maven
- Starting a New Project
- Lifecycle
- Dependencies
- Properties
- Executing Code
- Deploying to Maven Central
-
JUnit
- What is JUnit?
- Hamcrest
- Assumptions
- Parameterized Tests
- JUnit Theories
- Utilizing Essential Libraries
-
Logback
- Using SLF4J
- Configuration
- MDC
-
Hibernate
- Starting Out
- Mappings
- HQL
- Configuration
- Find out More
-
Guava
- Collections
- Objects
- Concurrency
- Functional Programming
- Optional
- Other Useful Classes
-
Modern Java Concurrency
- State of Concurrent Programming in Java
- Prominent Models for Concurrency
- Synchronize in Java
- Java Futures
- STM in Clojure
- Actors
- Groovy GPars
-
RxJava
- Flowable
- Parallel Computing
- Schedulers
- Publishers
- Hot and Cold
- Backpressure
-
Ecosystem Overview
-
Part III: JVM Languages
-
Other JVM Languages
- Why use non-Java Languages?
- Polyglot Programming
- Edge-Craft
- Java.next(): Groovy vs. Scala
-
Groovy
- What is Groovy?
- Compact Syntax
- List and Map Definitions
- Easy Properties
- GString
- Closures
- A Better Switch
- Gotcha’s
- Command Chains
- Modules
- Static Type Checking
- Invoke Dynamic Support in Groovy
-
The Groovy Ecosystem
- Web and UI Frameworks
- Cloud Computing Frameworks
- Build Frameworks
- Testing Frameworks/Code Analysis
- Concurrency
- Others
-
Gradle
- Getting Started
- Projects and Tasks
- Plugins
- Configuring a Task
- Extra Configuration
- Maven Dependencies
- Gradle Properties
- Multiproject builds
- File Operations
- Exploring
- Build Scans
- Summary
-
Spock
- Introduction
- A Simple Test
- Mocking
- Lists or Tables of Data
- Expecting Exceptions
- Conclusion
-
Scala
- What is Scala?
- Hello World
- Everything’s an object
- Everything’s an expression
- Match is Switch on Steroids
- Traits as Mixins
- List and Apply
- Tuples
- Maps
- For Expressions
- A Brief History of Scala
- Conclusion
-
The Scala Ecosystem
- Web Frameworks
- ORM Frameworks
- Build frameworks
- Testing frameworks/Code Analysis
- Concurrency
-
Other JVM Languages
-
Part IV: The Web
-
RESTful
- REST in Groovy
- REST in Scala
- JAX-RS 1.0
- JAX-RS 2.0
-
Microservices and Clouds
- Microservices
- OSS
- More Information
- JVM Clouds
-
Grails
- What is Grails?
- Quick Overview of Grails
- Plugins
- REST in Grails
- Short History of Grails
- Testing
- Cache Plugin
- Grails Wrapper
- Cloud
-
Spark
- Getting Started
- Routes
- Filters
- Sessions, Cookies, and More
-
Spring Boot
- Gradle Plugin
- SpringBootApplication
- Auto-Cofiguration
- Actuator
- Rest Controller
- Devtools
- Conclusion
-
Play Framework
- What is Play?
- Quick Overview of Play
- Controllers, Views, Forms
- ORM
- Play 1.x
- Play 2.0
- Getting Started
-
Ratpack
- Script
- Java Main
- Gradle
- Ratpack Layout
- Handlers
- Rendering
- JSON
- Bindings
- Blocking
- Configuration
- Testing
- Summary
-
Final Thoughts
- The State of the JVM
- The Future
- Contact the Author
- Appendix: Groovy for Java Devs
- Appendix: Scala for Java Devs
-
Java 8 Cheatsheet
- Lambda Syntax
- Method References
- Functional Interfaces under java.util.function
- Contact the Author
-
RESTful
- Notes
Causes Supported
Electronic Frontier Foundation
Defending your civil liberties in a digital world.
https://www.eff.org/Based in San Francisco, EFF is a donor-supported membership organization working to protect fundamental rights regardless of technology.
The Leanpub 60 Day 100% Happiness Guarantee
Within 60 days of purchase you can get a 100% refund on any Leanpub purchase, in two clicks.
Now, this is technically risky for us, since you'll have the book or course files either way. But we're so confident in our products and services, and in our authors and readers, that we're happy to offer a full money back guarantee for everything we sell.
You can only find out how good something is by trying it, and because of our 100% money back guarantee there's literally no risk to do so!
So, there's no reason not to click the Add to Cart button, is there?
See full terms...
Earn $8 on a $10 Purchase, and $16 on a $20 Purchase
We pay 80% royalties on purchases of $7.99 or more, and 80% royalties minus a 50 cent flat fee on purchases between $0.99 and $7.98. You earn $8 on a $10 sale, and $16 on a $20 sale. So, if we sell 5000 non-refunded copies of your book for $20, you'll earn $80,000.
(Yes, some authors have already earned much more than that on Leanpub.)
In fact, authors have earnedover $13 millionwriting, publishing and selling on Leanpub.
Learn more about writing on Leanpub
Free Updates. DRM Free.
If you buy a Leanpub book, you get free updates for as long as the author updates the book! Many authors use Leanpub to publish their books in-progress, while they are writing them. All readers get free updates, regardless of when they bought the book or how much they paid (including free).
Most Leanpub books are available in PDF (for computers) and EPUB (for phones, tablets and Kindle). The formats that a book includes are shown at the top right corner of this page.
Finally, Leanpub books don't have any DRM copy-protection nonsense, so you can easily read them on any supported device.
Learn more about Leanpub's ebook formats and where to read them