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Jakarta EE Cookbook

You're reading from   Jakarta EE Cookbook Practical recipes for enterprise Java developers to deliver large scale applications with Jakarta EE

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838642884
Length 380 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Elder Moraes Elder Moraes
Author Profile Icon Elder Moraes
Elder Moraes
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. New Features and Improvements 2. Server-Side Development FREE CHAPTER 3. Building Powerful Services with JSON and RESTful Features 4. Web and Client-Server Communication 5. Security of the Enterprise Architecture 6. Reducing Coding Effort by Relying on Standards 7. Deploying and Managing Applications on Major Jakarta EE Servers 8. Building Lightweight Solutions Using Microservices 9. Using Multithreading on Enterprise Context 10. Using Event-Driven Programming to Build Reactive Applications 11. Rising to the Cloud - Jakarta EE, Containers, and Cloud Computing 12. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix - The Power of Sharing Knowledge

Building decoupled services

Maybe you have at least heard something about building decoupled things in the software world— decoupled classes, decoupled modules, and decoupled services.

But what does it mean for a software unit being decoupled from another?

Practically, two things are coupled when any changes made to one of them requires you to also change the other one. For example, if you have a method that returns a string and changes it to return a double, all of the methods calling that method are required to be changed.

There are levels of coupling. For example, you could have all of your classes and methods very well designed for loose coupling, but they are all written in Java. If you change one of them to .NET and would like to keep all of them together (in the same deployment package), you need to change all of the other ones into the new language.

Another thing...

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