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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

Chapter 3. Reverse Engineering the Domain Layer with JPA

The domain layer represents the real-world entities that model the heart of your application. At the highest level, the domain layer represents the application's business domain and fully describes the entities, their attributes, and their relationships with one another. At its most basic level, the domain layer is a set of Plain Old Java Objects (POJOs) that define the Java representation of the database tables being mapped onto your application. This mapping is achieved through JPA.

The Java Persistence API (JPA) is one of the most significant advances in the Java EE 5 platform, replacing the complex and cumbersome entity beans with the far simpler POJO-based programming model. JPA provides a standard set of rules for Object Relational Mapping (ORM), which are simple, intuitive, and easy to learn. Database relationships, attributes, and constraints are mapped onto POJOs using JPA annotations.

In this chapter we will...

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