1. You need to be proficient in object-oriented analysis and Design (ooa/ood), involving patterns (GOF,J2EEDP), and integrated patterns. You should understand UML, especially class,object,interaction and Statediagrams.
2. You need to learn the basics of the Java language and its core class library (Collections,serialization,streams,networking,?multithreading,reflection,event, Handling,nio,localization, and others).
3. You should understand jvm,classloaders,classreflect, and the basic working mechanism of garbage collection. You should have the ability to decompile a class file and understand some basic assembly instructions.
4. If you are going to write a client program, you need to learn the Web applet (applet), must master the idea and method of GUI design, and the SWING,AWT,SWT of desktop program. You should also be aware of the JavaBean component pattern of the UI widget. JavaBeans is also used in JSPs to separate business logic from the presentation layer.
5. You need to learn Java database technology, and will use at least one persistence/orm architecture, such as Hibernate,jdo,? Cocobase,toplink,insideliberator (domestic JDO red Factory software) or Ibatis.
6. You should also understand the meaning of the impedance mismatch of the object relationship, how it affects the interaction of the business object with the relational database, and the results of its operation, as well as the application of different database products, such as Racle,mysql,mssqlserver.
7. You need to learn servlets,jsp, as well as Jstl (standardtaglibraries) and optional third-party taglibraries.
8. You need to familiarize yourself with the mainstream web frameworks, such as Jsf,struts,tapestry,cocoon,webwork, and the following patterns of their involvement, such as Mvc/model2.
9. You need to learn how to use and manage Web servers, such as Tomcat,resin,jrun, and know how to extend and maintain web programs on top of them.
10. You need to learn about distributed objects and remote APIs such as RMI and RMI/IIOP.
11. You need to master a variety of popular middleware technical standards and implemented in conjunction with Java, such as Tuxedo, Croba, and of course, Java EE itself.
12. You need to learn at least one of the XMLAPI, such as JAXP (javaapiforxmlprocessing), JDOM (Javaforxmldocumentobjectmodel), dom4j, or JAXR ( javaapiforxmlregistries).
13. You should learn how to use Java APIs and tools to build webservice. such as Jax-RPC (JAVAAPIFORXML/RPC), SAAJ? (Soapwithattachmentsapiforjava), JAXB (javaarchitectureforxmlbinding), JAXM (javaapiforxmlmessaging),? JAXR (javaapiforxmlregistries), or JWSDP (Javawebservicesdeveloperpack).
14. You need to learn a lightweight application framework, such as Spring,picocontainer,avalon, and their ioc/di style (setter,constructor,interfaceinjection).
15. You need to be familiar with different Java EE Technologies, such as Jndi (Javanaminganddirectoryinterface), JMS? (Javamessageservice), Jta/jts (Javatransactionapi/javatransactionservice), JMX? (Javamanagementextensions), as well as javamail.
16. You need to learn about Enterprise-class JavaBeans (EJBS) and their different component modes: Stateless/statefulsessionbeans,entitybeans (contains bean-?). Managedpersistence[bmp] or container-managedpersistence[cmp] and its ejb-ql), or? Message-drivenbeans (MDB).
17. You need to learn how to manage and configure a Java EE application server, such as Weblogic,jboss, and take advantage of its additional services, such as cluster classes, connection pooling, and distributed processing support. You also need to know how to encapsulate and configure applications on top of it and be able to monitor and tune its performance.
18. You need to be familiar with aspect-oriented programming and attribute-oriented programming (both of which are easily confusingly abbreviated as AOP), as well as their mainstream Java specifications and execution. such as AspectJ and Aspectwerkz.
19. You need to be familiar with different useful APIs and frameworks to serve you. such as log4j (logging/tracing), Quartz? (scheduling), JGroups (networkgroupcommunication), Jcache (distributedcaching),? Lucene (Full-textsearch), jakartacommons and so on.
20. You should be proficient in a javaide such as Sunone,netbeans,intellijidea or Eclipse. (Some people prefer VI or Emacs to write files.) Whatever you use.)
21.Java (which is precisely some configuration) is verbose and requires a lot of manual code (such as EJBS), so you need to be familiar with code generation tools such as Xdoclet.
22. You need to be familiar with a unit test system (JNUNIT) and learn about different build and deployment Tools (Ant,maven).
23. You need to be familiar with some of the software engineering processes that are often used in Java development. For example, Rup (rationalunifiedprocess) andagilemethodologies.
24. You also need to follow the pace of Java development, such as now can learn Webwork2.0
25. You will need to have an understanding of the actual project development process, at least two projects with practical application value, not a practice project! Because now the enterprise value is that you have no actual development
Experience, real development experience is the embodiment of the project you do, that is, a practical application of the project!
25 learning goals to be aware of as a Java guru