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Quick Start Guide to Oracle Fusion Development: Oracle JDeveloper and Oracle ADF

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Written by a Group Product Manager at Oracle, this Oracle Press guide gets you up and running quickly with your first Oracle Fusion applications. Quick Start Guide to Oracle Fusion Development provides only the essential information you need to build applications in a matter of hours. Rapidly learn the building blocks and functionality you’ll use most of the time. The progression of topics closely matches the application building process, taking you through a typical developer scenario from start to completion. Quick Start Guide to Oracle Fusion Development features The perfect entry point to Oracle Fusion development
Introduction to Fusion and the Fusion Technologies; Introduction to JDeveloper and Oracle ADF; Finding your Way Around JDeveloper; Building Business Services; Introducing ADF Business Components; The Role of the Entity; A View of your Data – The View Object; The Application Module; Implementing Business Service Validation; More View Object Features; Building the User Interface; Introducing ADF Face Rich Client; ADF Model; Building Typical ADF Pages; Building Application Flow; Menus, Toolbars and Buttons; Advanced UI Techniques; Data Visualization and Other Rich UI Components; Application Look and Feel; Common Coding Patterns; Common Business Service Coding Examples; Common View Coding Examples

224 pages, Paperback

First published August 19, 2010

6 people want to read

About the author

Grant Ronald

2 books

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Displaying 1 of 1 review
312 reviews4 followers
March 27, 2016
A good brief run through of the essential basics of Oracle Fuscion ADF development. It covers JDeveloper (The bespoke IDE for ADF development), the various structures such as Entity Objects, View Objects, Application Modules, JSF and it's components, and how to extend the framework to write more custom code.
As the ADF framework has quite a few custom things (such as Expression Lanuage and the JDeveloper IDE) this is essential to get started. However, a lot of the information is available for free online, but by limiting yourself to those resources you may risk on missing out on a crucial piece of information for your development task.
I'd recommend this to new Developers to ADF and that they follow on with a ADF JSF book to complete there understanding of the framework.
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