Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
Need help for a beginner JavaEE developer?
I've been digging into the JAVAEE stack since week 2. So far, not so much. The first week I took a detailed read about the entire JAVA EE stack.
The first thing I did was download the official javaee7 tutorial from oracle and just follow the order. Now stopped on JSF. But at the same time, I'm parsing JDBC (or rather, already, in 1 evening), JPA, CDI
For some reason it seems to me that I took these "abbreviations" a little out of order. So I want to know what to comprehend in what order. In principle, you don’t need to go far, you can learn everything as indicated in the official tutorial.
It's just that there are topics that I get hung up on, and literature in English is not perceived as quickly as Russian.
I started reading "Learning JAVA EE", but for some reason I don't like the presentation of the material at all. Immediately bang ... and CDI
On the other hand, I understand one thing: all this is most likely useless, real experience is needed. Moreover, it is normal, and most likely it will not work to get it by self-study. Here we take the section in the book "Learning JAVA EE" about CDI. All these interceptors, alternatives ... all this, of course, is cool, but after reading the chapter, I tried to connect all this on my own on something else ... it didn’t work out ... I
advise many to ask for an intern "for free". Sent a message to 22 companies (16 of them - remotely). Those in my city - did not even answer, the rest - politely sent. That is, you need to teach yourself. I can't count on help. I can google. For each topic, I found simply huge resources.
It turns out like this ... I read about N, and there is a mention of P, in which, in turn, you need to know X
That's all.
In short...
We need a kick from professional Java EE developers.
Please tell me in what order to learn all this. Who taught how?
Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
You have to start with English.
Then Java Core + Collection + OOP + SQL + UML
And then everything is on the rise: JDBC, Server (TomCat/Jetty/JBoss), Servlet+JSP, Spring, Hibernate.
After that, additional things are already possible: JSF/Spring MVC, SOAP/REST, HTML, JS
Didn't find what you were looking for?
Ask your questionAsk a Question
731 491 924 answers to any question