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The Java Workshop

You're reading from   The Java Workshop Learn object-oriented programming and kickstart your career in software development

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838986698
Length 606 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
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Authors (3):
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Eric Foster-Johnson Eric Foster-Johnson
Author Profile Icon Eric Foster-Johnson
Eric Foster-Johnson
Andreas Göransson Andreas Göransson
Author Profile Icon Andreas Göransson
Andreas Göransson
David Cuartielles David Cuartielles
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David Cuartielles
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started 2. Learning the Basics FREE CHAPTER 3. Object-Oriented Programming 4. Collections, Lists and Java's Built-In APIs 5. Exceptions 6. Libraries, Packages, and Modules 7. Databases and JDBC 8. Sockets, Files, and Streams 9. Working with HTTP 10. Encryption 11. Processes 12. Regular Expressions 13. Functional Programming with Lambda Expressions 14. Recursion 15. Processing Data with Streams 16. Predicates and Other Functional Interfaces 17. Reactive Programming with Java Flow 18. Unit Testing Appendix

Summary

This chapter introduced you to the use of the IntelliJ development environment, which is the basic tool that will be used throughout the book. Many of IntelliJ's features are common in other tools, along with the language used in menus and the overall programming interface.

You have seen some basic aspects of Java's syntax: how classes are defined, how code is nested inside curly braces, and how semicolons end each one of the commands. Comments help make the code more readable, both for others with whom you may collaborate and for yourself when reviewing your code in the future.

The primitive types offer a collection of possible variable types to be used in your programs to carry data, store the results of operations, and transfer information between different blocks of code.

All examples in this chapter are built from modifying an initial example that we used as a point of departure: "hello world"—that is, printing a string on the CLI. In later chapters, you will learn how to create your own classes from scratch, name them according to your needs, and store them in different folders. The next chapter will specifically cover statements in Java that control the flow of the programs.

KAY34

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