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Java became popular on the Internet due to the small java applets in 1995. Java applets provided great looking web sites. Java became pouplar due to its cross platform support. Java Appliction runs same on Windows as on Linux/Unix/Mac. JSP and Java Servlets are used for server side programming to create dynamic pages which change with every request. We have JSP/ Servlet programmers/developers. We can provide all kind of java web development services. Contact us for a free quote.


Java Web Development News and Articles

  • Jakarta NoSQL: Why JPA Is Not Enough for the AI Era

    The most effective way to present this idea is to begin with the challenge architects face: AI has transformed the persistence landscape. Enterprise applications were once built almost exclusively on relational databases, making JPA a keystone of Jakarta EE. 

    Today, modern systems use a mix of relational databases, document stores, caches, graph engines, and increasingly, vector databases that support semantic search, retrieval-augmented generation (RAG), and AI-powered applications. Polyglot persistence is now the industry standard. While Jakarta EE standardized relational persistence through JPA, it still lacks a vendor-neutral standard for non-relational persistence. This gap forces developers to rely on fragmented, proprietary solutions, creating barriers to portability, productivity, and innovation.



  • From printTriangularNumber to Duff’s Device: Mastering Java Switch Statements Old and New

    In this blog post, we will see how the humble Java switch statement evolved from a fall-through curiosity into a powerful expression, and how understanding its mechanics unlocks classic techniques like Duff's Device.

    Java's switch statement has evolved from a fall-through-prone construct into a modern expression syntax introduced in Java 14. The post traces this evolution using a concrete example, a method that computes triangular numbers by intentionally allowing execution to cascade through cases without break statements.



  • Top Java Security Vulnerabilities and How to Prevent Them in Modern Java

    With the increasing number of security threats, organizations have invested heavily in cybersecurity initiatives to protect their applications, infrastructure, and sensitive data. Security vulnerabilities are rarely introduced intentionally. Most of them creep into applications through shortcuts, overlooked edge cases, outdated libraries, or some bad coding habits.

    Modern Java has significantly improved its security capabilities, but no framework or JVM version can completely protect an application from insecure coding practices. As developers, we still need to understand where vulnerabilities originate and how to prevent them before they reach production.



  • OpenAPI, ORM, SVG, and Lottie

    This is the third follow-up to Friday's release post. Saturday's was about how you iterate; yesterday's was about new platform APIs in the core; today's is about a run of pieces that change how you write the structural parts of an app.

    The pieces are an OpenAPI client generator, a SQLite ORM, JSON and XML mappers, a component binder with validation, build-time SVG and Lottie transcoders, and a declarative router with deep links. All ride on a single build-time codegen pipeline: a Maven-plugin pass that reads annotations or declarative source files at build time and emits typed Java that compiles into your binary. No reflection, no service loader, no Class.forName. The "How it works" section at the end of this post covers the codegen plumbing once you have seen what it powers.



  • On-Device Debugging and JUnit 5

    This is the first follow-up to Friday's release post, and it covers the two changes from this release that affect how you iterate on a Codename One app rather than what the app itself does. On-device debugging that treats Java as Java on a real iPhone or a real Android device, and standard JUnit 5 against the JavaSE simulator. The first is the one we have been wanting for a long time, and is the one that takes the most explaining, so most of the post is about it.

    On-Device Debugging That Treats Java as Java

    Codename One has always supported on-device debugging in the strict technical sense. You could attach Xcode to a .ipa, you could attach Android Studio to a running APK, you could read the native call stack, you could step through Objective-C or the C that ParparVM emits. What you could not do was set a breakpoint in MyForm.java, hit it on a real iPhone, and inspect a Java field on a Java object as a Java object. You also could not debug an iOS app without a Mac in the loop somewhere, because the only debugger that understood the binary was Xcode. The translation step between the Java you wrote and the C that ParparVM produces left no way back across the gap on the device.



 
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