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mahesh 1234

JUnit Tutorial | Testing Framework for java - javatpoint - 0 views

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    It is an open-source testing framework for java programmers. The java programmer can create test cases and test his/her own code. It is one of the unit testing framework. Current version is junit4. To perform unit testing, we need to create test cases.
Hendy Irawan

eclipser-blog: Testing Eclipse plug-ins - 0 views

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    When you write Eclipse plug-ins sooner or later you will start thinking about testing your work. The very first steps will lead you to the Internet. But to my (and maybe your ;) ) surprise this information is not very easy to find. I know two ways to accomplish this task and I want to describe the first one - testing Eclipse plug-ins using build-in JUnit support.
Hendy Irawan

Vaadin, Maven and Spring « about:software development - 0 views

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    Vaadin is a Rapid Application Development (RAD) framework for RIA applications. I only know it for a few months but since I started experimenting with it, I'm really in favor of it. I see a lot of advantages compared to Sun's Java EE standard front-end framework JSF. First of all Vaadin is a java library, so you only have to write Java to build a complete frontend. No need for a specific frontend language, no need for converters (for comboboxes),… This also implies that you can use the full Java power on the frontend side and that's an huge advantage because frontend code is now type-safe and easily refactorable. You can unit test your frontend with JUnit. You can also use all existing java libraries on the frontend side, for example LOG4J. Another advantage is the fact that Vaadin is easy to learn (JSF isn't!) and to use: it's straigtforward. It feels like developing desktop apps and for me developing desktop apps feels much more intuitive than developing web-apps the way I'm used to. Vaadin uses convention over configuration. No need to register new components, validators or whatever in different xml files. Themes have a default folder and a default folder structure. Vaadin is very well documented. There's the book of Vaadin wich explains every aspect of the framework very clear. On the site there's a blog, a FAQ section, a wiki, a forum, examples with Java source code, … It's very easy to extend. Want to create your own Validator? Just implement an interface or extend another Validator and use it. Want to create your own custom server side component? Just extend the CustomComponent class or extend from another component. There's also an add-on directory where you can download UI components, data components, tools, themes, …
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