This Java SE 8 Programming training covers the core language features and Application Programming Interfaces (API) you will use to design object-oriented applications with Java Standard Edition 8 (Java SE 8) Platform. Use this course to further develop your skills with the Java language.
Preview
By the end of this program you will learn to:
Create Java technology applications with the latest JDK Technology
Develop your object-oriented skills
Identify good practices in the use of the language to create robust Java application
Use Lambda expressions in Java applications
Store and manipulate data using collections
Manipulate files, directories and file systems
Connect to databases using standard SQL queries through JDBC
Create high-performance multi-threaded applications
Course Contents
Day 1
Java Platform Overview
Defining how the Java language achieves platform independence
Differentiating between the Java ME, Java SE, and Java EE Platforms
Evaluating Java libraries, middle-ware, and database options
Defining how the Java language continues to evolve
Java Syntax and Class Review
Creating simple Java classes
Creating primitive variables
Using operators
Creating and manipulate strings
Using if-else and switch statements
Iterating with loops: while, do-while, for, enhanced for
Creating arrays
Using Java fields, constructors, and methods
Encapsulation and Subclassing
Using encapsulation in Java class design
Modeling business problems using Java classes
Making classes immutable
Creating and use Java subclasses
Overloading methods
Overriding Methods, Polymorphism, and Static Classes
Using access levels: private, protected, default, and public.
Overriding methods
Using virtual method invocation
Using var args to specify variable arguments
Using the instance of operator to compare object types
Using upward and downward casts
Modeling business problems by using the static keyword
Implementing the singleton design pattern
Day 2
Java Platform Overview
Defining how the Java language achieves platform independence
Differentiating between the Java ME, Java SE, and Java EE Platforms
Evaluating Java libraries, middle-ware, and database options
Defining how the Java language continues to evolve
Java Syntax and Class Review
Creating simple Java classes
Creating primitive variables
Using operators
Creating and manipulate strings
Using if-else and switch statements
Iterating with loops: while, do-while, for, enhanced for
Creating arrays
Using Java fields, constructors, and methods
Encapsulation and Subclassing
Using encapsulation in Java class design
Modeling business problems using Java classes
Making classes immutable
Creating and use Java subclasses
Overloading methods
Overriding Methods, Polymorphism, and Static Classes
Using access levels: private, protected, default, and public.
Overriding methods
Using virtual method invocation
Using var args to specify variable arguments
Using the instance of operator to compare object types
Using upward and downward casts
Modeling business problems by using the static keyword
Implementing the singleton design pattern
Abstract and Nested Classes
Designing general-purpose base classes by using abstract classes
Constructing abstract Java classes and subclasses
Applying final keyword in Java
Distinguish between top-level and nested classes
Interfaces and Lambda Expressions
Defining a Java interface
Choosing between interface inheritance and class inheritance
Extending an interface
Defaulting methods
Anonymous inner classes
Defining a Lambda Expression
Collections and Generics
Creating a custom generic class
Using the type inference diamond to create an object
Creating a collection by using generics
Implementing an ArrayList
Implementing a TreeSet
Implementing a HashMap
Implementing a Deque
Ordering collections
Collections Streams, and Filters
Describing the Builder pattern
Iterating through a collection using lambda syntax
Describing the Stream interface
Filtering a collection using lambda expressions
Calling an existing method using a method reference
Chaining multiple methods together
Defining pipelines in terms of lambdas and collections
Day 3
Lambda Built-in Functional Interfaces
Listing the built-in interfaces included in java.util.function
Core interfaces - Predicate, Consumer, Function, Supplier
Using primitive versions of base interfaces
Using binary versions of base interfaces
Lambda Operations
Extracting data from an object using map
Describing the types of stream operations
Describing the Optional class
Describing lazy processing
Sorting a stream
Saving results to a collection using the collect method
Grouping and partition data using the Collectors class
Exceptions and Assertions
Defining the purpose of Java exceptions
Using the try and throw statements
Using the catch, multi-catch, and finally clauses
Autoclose resources with a try-with-resources statement
Recognizing common exception classes and categories
Creating custom exceptions
Testing invariants by using assertions
Java Date/Time API
Creating and manage date-based events
Creating and manage time-based events
Combining date and time into a single object
Working with dates and times across time zones
Managing changes resulting from daylight savings
Defining and create timestamps, periods and durations
Applying formatting to local and zoned dates and times
Day 4
I/O Fundamentals
Describing the basics of input and output in Java
Read and write data from the console
Using streams to read and write files
Writing and read objects using serialization
File I/O (NIO.2)
Using the Path interface to operate on file and directory paths
Using the Files class to check, delete, copy, or move a file or directory
Using Stream API with NIO2
Concurrency
Describing operating system task scheduling
Creating worker threads using Runnable and Callable
Using an ExecutorService to concurrently execute tasks
Identifying potential threading problems
Using synchronized and concurrent atomic to manage atomicity
Using monitor locks to control the order of thread execution
Using the java.util.concurrent collections
The Fork-Join Framework
Parallelism
The need for Fork-Join
Work stealing
RecursiveTask
Day 5
Parallel Streams
Reviewing the key characteristics of streams
Describing how to make a stream pipeline execute in parallel
List the key assumptions needed to use a parallel pipeline
Defining reduction
Describing why reduction requires an associative function
Calculating a value using reduce
Describing the process for decomposing and then merging work
Listing the key performance considerations for parallel streams
Database Applications with JDBC
Defining the layout of the JDBC API
Connecting to a database by using a JDBC driver
Submitting queries and get results from the database
Specifying JDBC driver information externally
Performing CRUD operations using the JDBC API
Localization
Describing the advantages of localizing an application
Defining what a locale represents
Read and set the locale by using the Locale object
Building a resource bundle for each locale
Calling a resource bundle from an application
Changing the locale for a resource bundle