Course overview
- Provider
- Udemy
- Course type
- Paid course
- Level
- All Levels
- Duration
- 27 hours
- Lessons
- 124 lessons
- Certificate
- Available on completion
- Course author
- Engineering .Org.In
-
- Master design principles, best practices and coding conventions for writing well-designed, professional Java code
- Get real-world experience by developing an Java based Web application using technologies like JSP, Servlets
- Master Object-Oriented Programming concepts by using a real-world application as a case study
- Learn Java Practically
Description
Java is the solution to this incongruity. It's the realization of cross-platform code that works the same across any system you run it on. Java's approach to achieving this feat is counterintuitive at first. In a way, Java isn't compatible with anything but one computer. Stranger still, this computer doesn't actually exist. The computer that Java code targets is the Java Virtual Machine (JVM). This is a program written by Java's creators and distributed for practically any computing device you can think of. As long as you have it installed, any Java code you run is handled by this "imaginary" computer living inside your computer. Java code is executed by the JVM, which sends appropriate platform-specific instructions to your computer, so everything works the same on every OS and architecture.
Of course, the method used by Java isn't really the selling point here. Most users and many developers don't care how software compatibility is achieved, only that it happens. Many languages promise cross-platform functionality, and usually, that promise is ultimately true, but the journey isn't always easy. Programming languages must be compiled for their target platforms, scripting languages require platform-specific interpreters, and it's rare that either can ensure consistent access to low-level system resources. Cross-platform support is getting better and better, with libraries to help with translating paths and environment variables and settings, and some frameworks (notably Qt) do much to bridge the gap for peripheral access. But Java has it and delivers it consistently and reliably.
In This Course, We Are Going To Work On 15 Real World Projects Listed Below:
Project-1: Email Administration System - Java core
Project-2: Event Management System - Java servlet
Project-3: Online Quiz system - JDBC, JSP
Project-4: E library System - Java servlet, JDBC
Project-5: TCP Chat Application - Java networking, java swing
Project-6: Covid Information Tracker - Java spring boot, jdbc
Project-7: Blog & Report System - Java, JSP, AJAX
Project-8: Email System Web App - Java Servlet, JSP
Project-9: Network Packet Tracer Using Java - Java Swing, Maven
Project-10: Symmetric Encryption Cryptography in Java
Project-11: Employee Management System - Java, Spring framework, Hibernate, Heroku development
Project-12: Breakout Ball Game - Java, OOPs, Java AWT swing
Project-13:Create a School Payment Management System in JAVA-Core java
Project-14:Build Your Own Notepad Clone using JAVA-Core java
Project-15:Create a Game of Feeding the Snake using JAVA GUI-Core JAVA, JAVA Swing, JAVA AWT
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