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    Get Java SE 8 Programming Skills

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    Tutor support and key learning points

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    Guaranteed best price in the industry

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    Designed for java developers and java EE developers

The complete programming skillset is required by IT development companies. The use of basic programming languages does not meet all the customer requirements. There is a need of mature computer language that meets all the customer requirements. Java language is a platform-independent language which fulfils all the project needs. It is used to create software to be embedded in various consumer electronic devices. The Pentagon Training’s Java SE8 Programming course offers you the knowledge of Java Standard Edition 8 platform and Application Programming Interfaces (API).

The Java SE8 Programming course provides the knowledge of Lambda expressions in Java applications. You will be prepared with high-performance multi-threaded applications.

Who should take this course

  • Java EE Developers
  • Developer
  • Java Developers
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Prerequisites

There are no prerequisites required for Java SE8 course, but familiarity with basic Java is recommended.

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What Will You Learn

By undergoing this Java SE8 course, the candidates will learn to:

  • Create multi-threaded applications
  • Build Java applications by using object-oriented paradigm
  • Use I/O functionalities for reading and writing data
  • Use command line for running java application
  • Managing database tables using JDBC and JPA technology
  • Use Lambda Expressions
  • Execute error-handling methods using exception handling
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What's included

  Course Overview

Java SE 8 Programming course imparts knowledge of language structure and Application Programming Interfaces. You will get to know about the Java platform in which Java libraries and evolution of Java are covered. This Java SE8 course is designed to teach delegates the subclassing and encapsulation topics.

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  Course Content

 

An overview of Java Platform

 

·       The platform independence nature of Java language

·       Discriminating the Java ME, Java SE, and Java EE Platforms

·       Estimating Java libraries, middleware, and database selections

·       Essential points on the evolution of Java language

Java Syntax and Class Review

 

·       Forming Java classes

·       Using primitive variables

·       Using operators

·       Generating and operating strings

·       If-else and switch statements

·       Use of loops: while, do-while, for

·       Concept of arrays

·       Using constructors and functions

 

Subclassing and Encapsulation

·       Importance of encapsulation in Java Designing problems using Java classes

·       Making classes immutable

·       Creating and using Java subclasses

·       Overloading functions

 

Overriding Methods, Polymorphism, and Static Classes

 

·       Understanding access specifies

·       Methods of Overriding

·       Deploying virtual method request

·       Deploying the instance of operator

·       Using upward and downward casts

·       Designing business problems by using the static keyword

·       Executing the singleton design pattern

 

Abstract and Nested Classes

 

·       Planning general-purpose base classes

·       Constructing abstract Java classes and subclasses

·       Using final keyword in Java

·       differentiate between top-level and nested classes

 

 

Interfaces and Lambda Expressions

 

·       Describing a Java interface

·       Picking between interface inheritance and class inheritance

·       Extending an interface

·       Analysing defaulting methods

·       Describing a Lambda Expression

 

Collections and Generics

 

·       Generating a custom generic class

·       Create an object using the type inference diamond

·       Formation of a collection by using generics

·       Executing an ArrayList

·       Implementing a TreeSet

·       Executing a HashMap

·       Implementing a Deque

·       Collection Ordering

 

Lambda Interfaces

 

·       Declaration of the built-in interfaces comprised

·       Understanding Core interfaces - Predicate, Consumer, Function, Supplier

·       Using primaeval versions of base interfaces

Lambda Operations

 

·       Using map for extracting data

·       Describing the types of stream operations

·       Understanding the Optional class

·       Labelling lazy processing

·       Sorting a stream

·       Using the Collect method by saving results to a collection

·        Partition and Grouping and data using the Collectors class

Concurrency

 

·       Defining operating system task scheduling

·       Generating worker threads using Runnable and Callable

·       Deploying an Executor Service to execute responsibilities concurrently

·       Classifying potential threading problems

 

Using synchronised and concurrent atomic to manage atomicity

 

·       Using monitor locks to control thread execution control

·       The use of java.util.Concurrent collections

 

The Fork-Join Framework

 

·       Introducing Parallelism

·       The necessity for Fork-Join

·       Stealing of Work

·       RecursiveTask

Localization

 

·       Introducing Localization

·       Defining the benefits of localising an application

·       describing what a locale represents

·       Generating a resource bundle for each locale

·       Calling a resource bundle from an application

·       Changing the locale for a resource bundle

Database Applications with JDBC

 

·       Describing the layout of the JDBC API

·       Connection  using a JDBC driver with database

·       Acquiescing queries and display data

·       Requiring JDBC driver information externally

·       Executing CRUD operations using the JDBC API

 

Parallel Streams

 

·       Studying the key features of streams

·       Defining how to make a stream pipeline execute in parallel

·       The expectations needed to use a parallel pipeline

·       Defining reduction

·       Defining associative function

·       Defining the process for decaying and then combining work

·       Listing the key performance thoughts for parallel streams

 

Exceptions and Assertions

 

·       Describing the objectives of Java exceptions

·       Using the try and throw statements

·       Using the catch, multi-catch, and finally clauses

·       Auto close properties with a try-with-resources statement

·       Identifying common exception classes and groups

·       Generating custom exceptions

·       Challenging invariants by using declarations

 

I/O Fundamentals

 

·       Defining the fundamentals of input and output in Java

·       Read and write data from the console

·       The streams to read and write files

·       Writing and read objects using serialisation

 

Java Date/Time API

 

·       Making date-based events

·       Handling time-based events

·       Joining date and time into a single object

·       Employed with dates and times across time zones

·       Handling changes resulting from daylight savings

·       Describing and creating timestamps and periods

·       Formatting  dates and times to local and zoned

Collections Streams, and Filters

 

·       Defining the Builder pattern

·       The collection iteration with lambda syntax

·       Defining the Stream interface

·       The collection filtration using lambda expressions

·       Calling current method using a method reference

·       Binding multiple methods

·       Describing pipelines regarding lambdas and collections

 

File I/O

·       Operating on file and directory paths  using the Path interface

·       Deploying the Files class to check, delete, copy, or move a file or directory

 

 

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Java SE8 Programming Enquiry

 

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Reach us at +44 1344 961530 or info@pentagonit.co.uk for more information.

About Carlisle

Carlisle, a city in Cumbria, is also the managerial centre of the City of Carlisle region in North West England. It is the main settlement in the county of Cumbria and helps as the managerial centre for both Carlisle City Council and Cumbria County Council. At the time of the 2001 survey, the population of Carlisle was 71,773. In 2011, the city's population had increased to 75,306, with 107,524 in the wider city.

The early history of Carlisle is noticeable as a Roman payment, recognised to serve the forts on Hadrian's Wall. In the Middle Ages, because of its nearness to the Realm of Scotland, Carlisle industrialised meaningfully. The armed stranglehold, Carlisle Castle, was built in 1092 by William Rufus, and once added as a custodial for Mary, Queen of Scots. The castle now relatives the Duke of Lancaster's Regiment and the Border Regiment Museum. In the 12th century, Henry I allowed the building of a priory in Carlisle. The town produced the rank of a city when its diocese was formed in 1133, and the cloister industrialised Carlisle Cathedral.

Governance:

Carlisle has detained city status since the Middle Ages. Also, it kept its status as an area constituency or governmental borough for centuries, at one time returning two MPs. In 1835 it became a municipal borough and was later upgraded to a  borough status in 1914. The city's boundaries have changed several times since 1835 the final time in 1974. 

The municipal area surrounded many parts of parishes which were combined into a single civil parish of Carlisle in 1904. The currently present urban area is considered as an unparished area. Carlisle had in 2002 made an unsuccessful attempt to grow to a Lord Mayoralty. An iconic building that stands tallest in Carlisle may be demolished, and the area nearby to it rehabilitated.

Climate:

Carlisle practices an oceanic climate. In January 2005 Carlisle was hit by strong wind storms and torrential rains. On Saturday 8 January 2005 all roads into Carlisle were shut owed to severe flooding, the worst since 1822, which produced three deaths. Less severe but still significant flooding occurred in 2009, but due to Storm Desmond. Carlisle experienced even worse flooding than 2005 between Friday 4 and Sunday 6 December 2015. During this time, nearly 36 hours of nonstop precipitation broke flood defences. This left several areas submerged including Bitts Park, Hardwicke Circus and Warwick Road. This left the famous Sands Centre, stranded from the rest of the city. As several other areas of Cumbria were also severely pretentious, all trains to Scotland were postponed forever. The trains on the West Coast Principal went no further than Preston. Prime Minister David Cameron stayed the city on 7 December 2015 to measure the damage.

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