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Enterprise Application Development with Ext JS and Spring

You're reading from   Enterprise Application Development with Ext JS and Spring Designed for intermediate developers, this superb tutorial will lead you step by step through the process of developing enterprise web applications combining two leading-edge frameworks. Take a big leap forward in easy stages.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783285457
Length 446 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Gerald Gierer Gerald Gierer
Author Profile Icon Gerald Gierer
Gerald Gierer
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Preparing Your Development Environment FREE CHAPTER 2. The Task Time Tracker Database 3. Reverse Engineering the Domain Layer with JPA 4. Data Access Made Easy 5. Testing the DAO Layer with Spring and JUnit 6. Back to Business – The Service Layer 7. The Web Request Handling Layer 8. Running 3T on GlassFish 9. Getting Started with Ext JS 4 10. Logging On and Maintaining Users 11. Building the Task Log User Interface 12. 3T Administration Made Easy 13. Moving Your Application to Production A. Introducing Spring Data JPA
Index

Defining the DAO interfaces


An interface in the Java programming language defines a set of method signatures and constant declarations. Interfaces expose behaviors (or what can be done) and define a contract that implementing classes promise to provide (how it is done). Our DAO layer will contain one interface and one implementing class per domain object.

Note

The use of interfaces is an often misunderstood pattern in enterprise programming. The argument goes along the line, "Why add another set of Java objects to your codebase when they are not required". Interfaces do add to the number of lines of code that you write, but their beauty will be appreciated as soon as you are asked to refactor an aging project that was written with interfaces from the start. I have migrated an SQL-based persistence layer to a JPA persistence layer. The new DAO implementation replaced the old without any significant change in the service layer, thanks to the use of interfaces. Development was done in parallel...

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