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This five day course is being run seven times between Monday 28th May 2012 and Monday 3rd December 2012 in Manchester, London,

Book this course with us today from as little as £1,650.00 + VAT and with our price guarantee you can be confident of getting great value. Our team of experienced independent booking administrators will make the joining process painless and by providing feedback on your experiences you’ll also influence the Coursebookers independent course ratings.

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Locations/dates for this course
DateProviderLocationRatingPrice
Monday 28 May 2012QAManchesterSave £165.00£1,650.00+VAT
Monday 11 June 2012QALondonSave £165.00£1,650.00+VAT
Monday 18 June 2012QALondonSave £127.05£1,687.95+VAT
Monday 16 July 2012QAManchesterSave £165.00£1,650.00+VAT
Monday 20 August 2012QALondonSave £127.05£1,687.95+VAT
Monday 08 October 2012QALondonSave £127.05£1,687.95+VAT
Monday 03 December 2012QALondonSave £127.05£1,687.95+VAT
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SL-275-SE6 Java Programming Language
 
 
 
 
 


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Summary: 

The course features the Java Platform, Standard Edition 6 (Java SE 6) platform, and utilizes the Java SE Development Kit 6 (JDK 6) product. The students perform the course lab exercises using the NetBeans Integrated Development Environment (IDE) 5.5.

PreRequisites: 

To succeed fully in this course, students should be able to:

  • Be competent in creating programs in any programming language or have completed the SL-110-SE6: Fundamentals of the Java Programming Language course.
  • Create and edit text files using a text editor
Audience: 

Students who can benefit from this course are programmers who are interested in adding the Java programming language to their list of skills and students who are preparing for the Sun Certified Programmer for Java examination.

Objectives: 

Upon completion of this course, students should be able to:

  • Create Java technology applications that leverage the object-oriented features of the Java language, such as encapsulation, inheritance, and polymorphism
  • Execute a Java technology application from the command line
  • Use Java technology data types and expressions
  • Use Java technology flow control constructs
  • Use arrays and other data collections
  • Implement error-handling techniques using exception handling
  • Create an event-driven graphical user interface (GUI) using Swing components: panels, buttons, labels, text fields, and text areas
  • Implement input/output (I/O) functionality to read from and write to data and text files and understand advanced I/O streams
  • Create a simple Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) networked client that communicates with a server through sockets
  • Create multithreaded programs
Outline: 

Module 1 - Getting Started

  • Examine Java technology
  • Analyze a simple Java technology application
  • Execute a Java technology application

Module 2 - Object-Oriented Programming

  • Define modeling concepts: abstraction, encapsulation, and packages
  • Discuss Java technology application code reuse
  • Define class, member, attribute, method, constructor, and package
  • Use the access modifiers private and public as appropriate for the guidelines of encapsulation
  • Invoke a method on a particular object
  • Use the Java technology API online documentation

Module 3 - Identifiers, Keywords, and Types

  • Use comments in a source program
  • Distinguish between valid and invalid identifiers
  • Recognize Java technology keywords
  • List the eight primitive types
  • Define literal values for numeric and textual types
  • Define the terms primitive variable and reference variable
  • Declare variables of class type
  • Construct an object using new
  • Describe default initialization
  • Describe the significance of a reference variable
  • State the consequence of assigning variables of class type

Module 4 - Expressions and Flow Control

  • Distinguish between instance and local variables
  • Describe how to initialize instance variables
  • Recognize, describe, and use Java software operators
  • Distinguish between legal and illegal assignments of primitive types
  • Identify boolean expressions and their requirements in control constructs
  • Recognize assignment compatibility and required casts in fundamental types
  • Use if, switch, for, while, and do constructions and the labeled forms of break and continue as flow control structures in a program

Module 5 - Arrays

  • Declare and create arrays of primitive, class, or array types
  • Explain why elements of an array are initialized
  • Explain how to initialize the elements of an array
  • Determine the number of elements in an array
  • Create a multidimensional array
  • Write code to copy array values from one array to another

Module 6 - Class Design

  • Define inheritance, polymorphism, overloading, overriding, and virtual method invocation
  • Use the access modifiers protected and the default (package-friendly)
  • Describe the concepts of constructor and method overloading
  • Describe the complete object construction and initialization operation

Module 7 - Advanced Class Features

  • Create static variables, methods, and initializers
  • Create final classes, methods, and variables
  • Create and use enumerated types
  • Use the static import statement
  • Create abstract classes and methods
  • Create and use an interface

Module 8 - Exceptions and Assertions

  • Define exceptions
  • Use try, catch, and finally statements
  • Describe exception categories
  • Identify common exceptions
  • Develop programs to handle your own exceptions
  • Use assertions
  • Distinguish appropriate and inappropriate uses of assertions
  • Enable assertions at runtime

Module 9 - Collections and Generics Framework

  • Describe the general purpose implementations of the core interfaces in the Collections framework
  • Examine the Map interface
  • Examine the legacy collection classes
  • Create natural and custom ordering by implementing the Comparable and Comparator interfaces
  • Use generic collections
  • Use type parameters in generic classes
  • Refactor existing non-generic code
  • Write a program to iterate over a collection
  • Examine the enhanced for loop

Module 10 - I/O Fundamentals

  • Write a program that uses command-line arguments and system properties
  • Examine the Properties class
  • Construct node and processing streams, and use them appropriately
  • Serialize and deserialize objects
  • Distinguish readers and writers from streams, and select appropriately between them

Module 11 - Console I/ O and File I/O

  • Read data from the console
  • Write data to the console
  • Describe files and file I/O

Module 12 - Building Java GUIs Using the Swing API

  • Describe the JFC Swing technology
  • Define Swing
  • Identify the Swing packages
  • Describe the GUI building blocks: containers, components, and layout managers
  • Examine top-level, general-purpose, and special-purpose properties of container
  • Examine components
  • Examine layout managers
  • Describe the Swing single-threaded model
  • Build a GUI using Swing components

Module 13 - Handling GUI-Generated Events

  • Define events and event handling
  • Examine the Java SE event model
  • Describe GUI behavior
  • Determine the user action that originated an event
  • Develop event listeners
  • Describe concurrency in Swing-based GUIs and describe the features of the SwingWorker class

Module 14 - GUI-Based Applications

  • Describe how to construct a menu bar, menu, and menu items in a Java GUI
  • Understand how to change the color and font of a component

Module 15 - Threads

  • Define a thread
  • Create separate threads in a Java technology program, controlling the code and data that are used by that thread
  • Control the execution of a thread and write platform-independent code with threads
  • Describe the difficulties that might arise when multiple threads share data
  • Use wait and notify to communicate between threads
  • Use synchronized to protect data from corruption

Module 16 - Networking

  • Develop code to set up the network connection
  • Understand TCP/IP
  • Use ServerSocket and Socket classes to implement TCP/IP clients and servers

Description: 

The course features the Java Platform, Standard Edition 6 (Java SE 6) platform, and utilizes the Java SE Development Kit 6 (JDK 6) product. The students perform the course lab exercises using the NetBeans Integrated Development Environment (IDE) 5.5.

QA

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