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  • Book Overview & Buying Java 9 Programming By Example
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Java 9 Programming By Example

Java 9 Programming By Example

By : Peter Verhas
4.5 (2)
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Java 9 Programming By Example

Java 9 Programming By Example

4.5 (2)
By: Peter Verhas

Overview of this book

This book gets you started with essential software development easily and quickly, guiding you through Java’s different facets. By adopting this approach, you can bridge the gap between learning and doing immediately. You will learn the new features of Java 9 quickly and experience a simple and powerful approach to software development. You will be able to use the Java runtime tools, understand the Java environment, and create Java programs. We then cover more simple examples to build your foundation before diving to some complex data structure problems that will solidify your Java 9 skills. With a special focus on modularity and HTTP 2.0, this book will guide you to get employed as a top notch Java developer. By the end of the book, you will have a firm foundation to continue your journey towards becoming a professional Java developer.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
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Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Reactive streams


Reactive streams started as an initiative to provide a standard of handling data streams in an asynchronous mode by regulating the push of the data using back-pressure. The original site of the project is http://www.reactive-streams.org/.

Reactive streams are now implemented in JDK 9 in the java.util.concurrent package.

The aim of the definition of reactive streams is to define the interface that can handle the propagation of the generated data in a totally asynchronous way without the need on the receiving side to buffer the unlimited created data. When data is created in a stream and is made available to be worked on the worker that gets the data, has to be fast enough to handle all the data that is generated. The capacity should be high enough to handle the highest production. Some intermediate buffers may handle peaks, but if there is no control that stops or delays production when the consumer is at the top of its capacity, the system will fail. Reactive system interfaces...

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