Course (3-4) Oracle JDeveloper 11g Release 2 (11.1.2.4.0)
- 1. Getting Started
- 1.1. Getting Started with the JDeveloper IDE : Build a basic application, using the major components of the JDeveloper IDE.
- 1.2. Developing Rich Web Applications with Oracle ADF : Build an end-to-end rich Internet application that interacts with a database using Oracle ADF.
- 1.3. Building a Web Application Using EJB, JPA, and JavaServer Faces : Build a master-detail page and edit a web application with ADF Faces, EJB and JPA.
- 2. ADF Faces
- 2.1. Developing Ajax-Based User Interfaces with ADF Faces Rich Client Components : Use ADF Faces rich client JSF components to create Ajax-based web applications.
- 2.2. Charting with ADF Data Visualization Components - Graphs, Gauge, Maps, Pivot Table and Gantt : Add data visualization components, including graphs, gauges, maps, pivot tables, and gantt charts to your ADF Faces applications.
- 2.3. Creating and Using an ADF Declarative Component : Create an ADF declarative component in a project and deploy the project to an ADF library JAR, then consume the declarative component in JSF pages.
- 2.4. Implementing Drag and Drop : Define component attributes to use as drag sources and as targets for accepting drops, then create and register custom drop event handling code on target components.
- 2.5. Using Layout Components : Create a page layout by nesting Panel Stretch Layout, Panel Splitter, and other layout components to define specific areas on a page for headers, footers, and body contents.
- 2.6. Changing an Application's Look and Feel by Using Skins : Create a custom skin (CSS file) and apply it to a sample application, then modify its look and feel.
- 3. ADF Controller
- 3.1. Working with Bounded Task Flows, Regions and Routers : Create reusable JSF flows and leverage the new features of the ADF Task Flow.
- 3.2. Creating ADF Menus for Page Navigation : Create tabs and lists by defining unbounded task flows and ADF menu model metadata for a menu hierarchy, and then bind navigation pane and bread crumbs components to the menu model.
- 3.3. Creating a Train Using an ADF Bounded Task Flow : Use the ADF Faces Train component on a set of pages to display a series of navigation items that guide users through a multi-step task.
- 4. ADF Data Binding
- 4.1. Using a Bean Data Control : Create a simple databound application using JavaBeans and ADF Faces.
- 4.2. Using a URL Service Data Control : Create a URL data control from an XML schema that defines the structure of an RSS feed.
- 4.3. Using a Placeholder Data Control : Use placeholder data controls with ADF data binding to build complete, runnable pages.
- 5. Advanced ADF
- 5.1. Customizing and Personalizing an Application : Customize and personalize an Oracle ADF Application with Metadata Services (MDS).
- 5.2. Enabling Security in a Fusion Web Application : Build a Fusion web application and enable ADF security in it.
- 5.3. Using JUnit, Ant and Hudson for Continuous Integration : Configure your environment and use testing tools for continuous integration development management.
- 6. ADF Desktop Integration
- 6.1. Getting Started with ADF Desktop Integration : Use ADF Desktop Integration to develop Excel workbooks that are integrated with an ADF application.
- 7. Database Development
- 7.1. Designing and Building Database Tables : Connect to a database and create a new user, then create an offline database that you will reverse-engineer.
- 7.2. Use Logical Models in UML for Database Development : Create a logical model using a UML class diagram and transform it to a physical model. Then reverse engineer database definitions into class definitions.
- 8. Java SE
- 8.1. Building a Java Swing Application : Create a Java application and build the user interface (UI) using Swing components.
- 8.2. Building a Java Swing Application with Oracle ADF : Create a database-bound desktop application in Java using ADF Swing and ADF Business Components.
- 9. General JSF
- 9.1. Building a Simple JSF Application : Create a facelets page, design the UI with JSF components, and modify the behavior through code.
- 9.2. Creating JSF Page Navigation : Create a JSF navigation diagram to design the navigation, create JSF pages from the diagram and add the UI, then modify the behavior through code.
- 9.3. Binding a JSF Page to a Managed Bean : Create a JSF page and a Java class, then register the class as a managed bean, and bind the UI in the page to the managed bean.
- 10. Java EE and Web Services
- 10.1. Building and Using Web Services : Build and test four web services: an annotation-driven POJO service, a declaratively-driven POJO service, a service for an existing WSDL, and an EJB service.
- 10.2. Integrating RESTFul Web Services : Build and test a RESTFul Web service using annotation, then consume it in a JSF page.
- 10.3. Creating a Simple EJB Session Bean : Create a session bean, add a business method, then create a sample Java client and run it.
- 10.4. Building a JPA Application : Create entities from tables, create fields for the entity, generate a Java service facade, and then run the application.
- 11. ADF Mobile
- 11.1. Setting Up ADF Mobile : Install ADF Mobile extension, setup the iOS SImulator or Android Emulator and test the installation.
- 11.2. Building Mobile Applications with Oracle ADF Mobile : Use a simple java class to display an employee list in an ADF Mobile Application. Then, use a Web Service to upgrade an employee's salary. Finally, use Device Features to take and use a photograph.
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