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Hendy Irawan

meta beta: EMF and RAP and Virgo, oh my.. - 0 views

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    "what if I just dropped the EMF bundles into the same place, modified the demo .plan file to include them, and.. No way that could possibly work, right? Not only did it work, but it actually worked before I thought it would. I was ready for endless rounds of editing, rebuilding, restarting, reloading, re.. But instead, I saved the changes to the .plan file and Equinox/Virgo automagically hot-loaded them and ran through the dependencies there and then. I cleaned a couple of things up, and then I navigated to the URL, and there it was. Seriously, I haven't been that impressed by a technology that "just worked" since the first time I built an EMF model and editor. I'll say it: The Virgo/RAP/EMF stack is going to be -- already is -- a kick-ass combination. Light-weight development, light-weight deployment, industrial strength, web-based MDSD."
Hendy Irawan

Eclipse Buckminster Project - 0 views

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    * Buckminster is a set of frameworks and tools for automating build, assemble & deploy (BA&D) development processes in complex or distributed component-based development. Buckminster allows development organizations to define fine-grained "production
Hendy Irawan

guava-libraries - Project Hosting on Google Code - 0 views

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    contains a strictly compatible superset of the old Google Collections Library:
anonymous

Getting Started with RequestFactory - Google Web Toolkit - Google Code - 0 views

  • Entity Proxies
    • anonymous
       
      Proxy type (on the Client) vs Entity type (on the server)
  • proxy types
  • entity types
  • ...147 more annotations...
  • methods that return service stubs
  • one RequestFactory interface for your application
  • employeeRequest();
  • @Service(Employee.class)
  • extends RequestContext
  • extends RequestFactory
  • service stub
  • RequestFactory service stubs
  • must extend RequestContext
  • The methods in a service stub do not return entities directly
  • return subclasses of com.google.gwt.requestfactory.shared.Request.
  • This allows the methods on the interface to be invoked asynchronously with
  • Request.fire()
  • fire(    new Receiver()
  • onSuccess
  • callers pass an AsyncCallback that implements onSuccess()
  • takes a Receiver which must implement onSuccess()
  • Receiver is an abstract class having a default implementation of onFailure()
  • you can extend Receiver and override onFailure()
  • onViolation()
  • any constraint violations on the server
  • The Request type returned from each method
  • parameterized with the return type of the service method.
  • Methods that have no return value should return type Request<Void>
  • BigDecimal, BigInteger, Boolean, Byte, Enum, Character, Date, Double, Float, Integer, Long, Short, String, Void
  • subclass of EntityProxy
  • List<T> or Set<T>
  • primitive types are not supported
  • methods that operate on an entity itself
  • like persist() and remove()
  • return objects of type InstanceRequest rather than Reques
  • Server Implementations
  • methods defined in an
  • entity's service interface
  • implemented in the class named
  • @Service annotation
  • in these examples, is the entity class
  • service implementations do not directly implement the RequestContext interface
  • server-side implementations use the domain entity types
  • @Entity
  • EntityManager
  • createQuery
  • getResultList();
  • entityManager()
  • createEntityManager()
  • em.persist(this);
  • em.remove(attached
  • em.close();
  • defined in the service's
  • RequestContext interface
  • even though the implementation does not formally implement the interface in Java
  • name and argument list for each method
  • same on client and server
  • Client side methods
  • return Request<T>
  • only T on the server
  • EntityProxy types become the domain entity type on the server
  • Methods that return a Request object in the client interface are implemented as static methods on the entity
  • Methods that operate on a single instance of an entity, like persist() and remove(),
  • eturn an
  • InstanceRequest
  • in the client interface
  • Instance methods do not pass the instance directly, but rather via the
  • using()
  • instance methods must be implemented as non-static methods in the entity type
  • Four special methods are required on all entities
  • as they are used by the RequestFactory servlet:
  • constructor
  • findEntity
  • An entity's getId()
  • is typically auto-generated by the persistence engine (JDO, JPA, Objectify, etc.)
  • "find by ID" method has a special naming convention
  • find()
  • "find" plus the type's simple name
  • On the server
  • getVersion() method is used by RequestFactory to infer if an entity has changed
  • backing store (JDO, JPA, etc.) is responsible for updating the version each time the object is persisted,
  • RequestFactoryServlet sends an UPDATE
  • if an entity changes as
  • Second, the client maintains a version cache of recently seen entities
  • Whenever it sees an entity whose version has changed, it fires
  • UPDATE events on the event bus
  • so that listeners can update the view
  • GWT.create
  • and initialize it with your application's EventBus
  • GWT.create
  • requestFactory.initialize
  • create a new entity on the client
  • EmployeeRequest request
  • EmployeeProxy newEmployee
  • All client-side code should use the EmployeeProxy
  • not the Employee entity itself
  • unlike GWT-RPC, where the same concrete type is used on both client and server
  • RequestFactory
  • designed to be used with an ORM layer like JDO or JPA
  • on the server
  • to build data-oriented (CRUD) apps with an ORM-like interface
  • on the client
  • easy to implement a data access layer
  • structure your server-side code in a data-centric way
  • GWT-RPC, which is service-oriented
  • On the client side, RequestFactory keeps track of objects that have been modified and sends only changes
  • lightweight network payloads
  • solid foundation for automatic batching and caching of requests in the future
  • RequestFactoryServlet
  • RequestFactory uses its own servlet
  • own protocol
  • not designed for general purpose services like GWT-RPC
  • implements its
  • It is designed specifically for implementing a persistence layer on both client and server.
  • In persistence frameworks like JDO and JPA, entities are annotated with
  • client-side representation of an entity
  • known as a
  • DTO (Data Transfer Object)
  • hook used to indicate that an object can be managed by RequestFactory
  • RequestFactory
  • EntityProxy interface
  • automatically populates bean-style properties between entities on the server and the corresponding EntityProxy on the client,
  • send only changes ("deltas") to the server
  • extends EntityProxy
  • interface
  • @ProxyFor
  • reference the server-side entity being represented
  • It is not necessary to represent every property and method from the server-side entity in the EntityProxy
  • EntityProxyId returned by this method is used throughout RequestFactory-related classes
  • while getId() is shown in this example, most client code will want to refer to
  • EntityProxy.stableId() i
  • to represent any type
  • is not required to expose an ID and version
  • often used to represent embedded object types within entities
  • @Embedded
  • Address
  • Address type
  • POJO with no persistence annotations
  • Address is represented as a ValueProxy
  • extends ValueProxy
  • interface
  • extends EntityProxy
  • interface
  • AddressProxy
  • AddressProxy
  • ValueProxy can be used to pass any type to and from the server
  • RequestFactory
  • interface between your client and server code
  • RequestContext interface
  • The server-side service
  • must implement each method
anonymous

untitled - 0 views

  • initWidget(uiBinder.createAndBindUi(this));
    • anonymous
       
      To inizialize the "menber variable" whith the widget object described in the XML view despription
  • uiBinder.createAndBindUi(this)
  • GWT compiler won't actually visit this URL to fetch the file, because a copy of it is baked into the compiler
  • ...15 more annotations...
  • @UiField have default visibility
  • UIObject
  • DivElement
  • If your factory method needs arguments, those will be required as attributes.
  • Every widget that is declared in a template is created by a call to GWT.create().
  • @UiConstructor annotation.
  • you can mark your own widgets with
  • CricketScores has no default (zero args) constructor
  • you can define a @UiFactory method on the UiBinder's owner
  • annotate a constructor of CricketScores with @UiConstructor.
  •   @UiFactory
  • public class UserDashboard extends Composite {  interface MyUiBinder extends UiBinder<Widget, UserDashboard> {}  private static MyUiBinder uiBinder = GWT.create(MyUiBinder.class);  public UserDashboard() {    initWidget(uiBinder.createAndBindUi(this));  }}
  • use several different XML templates for the same view
  • public interface Display
  • methods can be called to fill in attribute values
Hendy Irawan

HttpComponents - HttpComponents Overview - 0 views

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    HttpClient is a HTTP/1.1 compliant HTTP agent implementation based on HttpCore. It also provides reusable components for client-side authentication, HTTP state management, and HTTP connection management. HttpComponents Client is a successor of and replacement for Commons HttpClient 3.x. Users of Commons HttpClient are strongly encouraged to upgrade.
Hendy Irawan

Spring Security - 0 views

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    Spring Security is a powerful and highly customizable authentication and access-control framework. It is the de-facto standard for securing Spring-based applications Spring Security is one of the most mature and widely used Spring projects. Founded in 2003 and actively maintained by SpringSource since, today it is used to secure numerous demanding environments including government agencies, military applications and central banks. It is released under an Apache 2.0 license so you can confidently use it in your projects. Spring Security is also easy to learn, deploy and manage. Our dedicated security namespace provides directives for most common operations, allowing complete application security in just a few lines of XML. We also offer complete tooling integration in SpringSource Tool Suite, plus our Spring Roo rapid application development framework. The Spring Community Forum and SpringSource offer a variety of free and paid support services. Spring Security is also integrated with many other Spring technologies, including Spring Web Flow, Spring Web Services, SpringSource Enterprise, SpringSource Application Management Suite and SpringSource tc Server.
abuwipp

Don't Use System.out.println! - 0 views

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    good tutorial showing how to log using log4j, contains  many examples
samantha armstrong

FixComputerpProblemsSite Surely Knows How to Fix Computer Problems! - 1 views

I was having problems with my laptop before. Good thing FixComputerpProblemsSite helped me fix it. And they are really the experts when it comes to solving any computer related issues. They can eas...

fix computer problems java web development opensource framework programming eclipse spring jsf library

started by samantha armstrong on 07 Jun 11 no follow-up yet
abuwipp

The 4 rules of simple design | Agile Zone - 0 views

DJHell .

Hades - Übersicht - redmine.synyx.org - 0 views

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    Hades is a utility library to work with Data Access Objects implemented with Spring and JPA. The main goal is to ease the development and operation of a data access layer in application
DJHell .

Apache MyFaces Trinidad - Mobile Application Development - 0 views

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    When developing a mobile application, you need not focus on the limitations or capabilities of different browsers, as Trinidad enables you to develop applications that function properly on different browser types. The Trinidad renderer ensures that the target browser can consume contents correctly. It handles the variations in both browser implementations of HTML, JavaScript, CSS, DOM, XMLHttpRequest and system performance. For example, if a browser does not support XMLHttpRequest and is incapable of posting a partial page request to a server, support for AJAX enables the application to revert automatically to a full page submit so that the same page functions whether the browser supports XMLHttpRequest or not. Furthermore, if the target browser does no support JavaScript Trinidad will automatically render contents that work on HTML by removing all dependencies on JavaScript.
DJHell .

Portale und Portlets (4) || IT-Republik - JAXenter - Artikel - 0 views

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    In den letzten Teilen der Serie wurden bereits viele Neuerungen des JSR-286 vorgestellt und an konkreten Beispielen demonstriert. In diesem Teil wird der Schwerpunkt darauf gelegt, wie die entstandene Ausgabe gecached werden kann, um auch das Thema Performance nicht aus den Augen zu verlieren. Ein Überblick über die Annotation-Unterstützung des JSR-286 rundet die Einführung neuer Features ab.
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