Re: starting J2EE

From: prabhat (prabhat143_at_yahoo.com)
Date: 01/24/04


Date: 24 Jan 2004 07:43:41 -0800

Thanks for the suggestion. What I meant was, how do I learn J2EE from
scratch? Is there an equivalent of "hallo world" program using j2ee
n-tier architecture? How can I write a small and simple program that
uses all three tiers and help me get a practical experience?

Do I have to have a server and database to start? I am trying to learn
on my PC running Windows XP which is just connected to the Internet.

Cheers,
Prabhat

"analogueboy" <analogueboy@NOSPAMPLS.blueyonder.co.uk> wrote in message news:<dahQb.1371$MM5.51@news-binary.blueyonder.co.uk>...
> have a look at either tomcat (not the complete j2ee api - but some
> interesting stuff) or jboss. Just unzip jboss to the dir of your choice, cd
> to ./bin and type run (will start default server). Its much easier than most
> of the commercial servers to get familiar with.
>
>
> "prabhat" <prabhat143@yahoo.com> wrote in message
> news:f5c489eb.0401231114.ca4596e@posting.google.com...
> > Hi,
> >
> > I am teaching myself J2EE. I have couple of books but how can I get
> > practical experience?
> >
> > I installed trial version of IBM-websphere but it seems too complex
> > for a beginner in J2EE. I have WindowsXP.
> >
> > Suggestions are welcome.
> >
> > Cheers,
> > prabhat



Relevant Pages

  • Re: starting J2EE
    ... have a look at either tomcat (not the complete j2ee api - but some ... Just unzip jboss to the dir of your choice, ... of the commercial servers to get familiar with. ... > I am teaching myself J2EE. ...
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  • starting J2EE
    ... I am teaching myself J2EE. ... I have couple of books but how can I get ... I installed trial version of IBM-websphere but it seems too complex ...
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