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Java 9 Programming By Example

You're reading from   Java 9 Programming By Example Your guide to software development

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786468284
Length 504 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Peter Verhas Peter Verhas
Author Profile Icon Peter Verhas
Peter Verhas
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Java 9 2. The First Real Java Program - Sorting Names FREE CHAPTER 3. Optimizing the Sort - Making Code Professional 4. Mastermind - Creating a Game 5. Extending the Game - Run Parallel, Run Faster 6. Making Our Game Professional - Do it as a Webapp 7. Building a Commercial Web Application Using REST 8. Extending Our E-Commerce Application 9. Building an Accounting Application Using Reactive Programming 10. Finalizing Java Knowledge to a Professional Level

Reactive programming in a nutshell

Reactive programming is a paradigm that focuses more on where the data flows during computation than on how to compute the result. If the problem is best described as several computations that depend on the output of each other but several may be executed independent of the other, reactive programming may come into the picture. As a simple example, we can have the following computation that calculates the value of h from some given b, c, e, and f values, using f1, f2, f3, f4, and f5 as simple computational steps:

a = f1(b,c) 
d = f2(e,f)
k = f3(e,c)
g = f4(b,f,k)
h = f5(d,a,g)

If we write these in Java in the conventional way, the methods f1 to f5 will be invoked one after the other. If we have multiple processors and are able to parallelize the execution, we may perform some of the methods in parallel. This, of course, assumes that these methods are purely computational methods...

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