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Entries matching: Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA
This installment concludes our series on Flex, LiveCycle Data Services, and EJB 3.0 by exploring the administrative section of the application, showing more managed data features, and looking at server push from JMS to Flex.
In the last installment of Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA, we worked on building the Flex view. In this installment we're going to continue looking into the Flex view by examining the search tools in our application.
In this installment of Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA we're going to continue building the Flex view. We'll see more of mxml, Flex's layout language, and Flex's powerful binding framework.
We've already seen how to automate the Java unit tests with TestNG, and in this week’s installment of Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA we're going to automate our Flex tests with Flex Unit and Maven/Ant. Join us Mondays as we finish up our series, Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA.
In the last installment of Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA, we looked at the Cairngorm command. In this installment we're going to have a look at the model locator. Follow along with each stage of development, every Monday on InsideRIA.com.
Join us every Monday for the latest in our follow-along-at-home development series, Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA. This week we're focusing on Cairngorm commands and controllers and where they fit in our development.
Last time we looked at Cairngorm and its role in our application. This installment of Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA, we're going to look at Cairngorm’s business delegates and how to set up a service oriented architecture in Flex. Join us every Monday for the next installment in our series: Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA.
In this week's installment of Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA we're going to start looking at the Flex service layer of our application, and be introduced to Cairngorm, the Flex micro-architecture that helps simplifiy the complexity of building user interfaces in Flex.
Last time we looked at testing the Java part of the application so far. In this section of the series from Tony Hillerson's Enterprise Application Development with Flex, we'll look at Maven building our service layer, and be introduced to the powerful LiveCycle Data Services assemblers, which deal with the managed data flowing in and out of Flex. Follow along every Monday with our project!
Last installment we looked at the interfaces for the service layer of our application. In Part 11 of Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA, we'll look at using TestNG, a Java test framework, to test our application so far. This feature is packed with code samples! Every Monday we bring you another installment in the series.
Last week we looked at the Actionscript and Java code for the persistent entities in our application. In this week’s installment of Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA, we're going to look at the Java code for the service layer in our application and introduce the concept of the session bean from EJB 3.0. Follow along every Monday with our development tutorial.
In the last installment we looked at our development lifecycle and the dependencies of our persistence layer. Now we're going to look at the actual code that makes up the persistence layer, Actionscript and Java. Follow along at each stage of development, every Monday on InsideRIA.com.
In the last installment of Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA, we looked at building Flex with Maven and Ant, and now we'll look at the development lifecycle so far. Then, in preparation for next installment, we'll look at the dependencies for the persistence layer of the application. Every Monday brings another stage of development at InsideRIA.com.
Last installment we looked at Maven and Ant integration and using some data tools to help automatically populate the database. Now in part seven of Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA, we're going to look at the UI part of the project including building Flex from Maven through Ant and automatically running external tasks from Eclipse. Follow along every Monday...
In the last installment we looked at the Maven build lifecycle and where the tests are located in our sample application. In this installment of the Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA we'll look at how Maven and Ant integrate and how we'll use DBUnit and DDLUtils to build and populate the database. Join us every Monday for another step in the development process.
The last installment offered a guided tour of our project's structure, with an in-depth look at the three child projects and the project dependencies. In this installment of the Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA we’ll take a look at the Maven build lifecycle and where the tests are located in our sample application. Join in our development exercise, every Monday.
In the last installment of our Development Series Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA, we looked at how we organized our project and described it with Maven. Now we'll continue looking at the project's structure, with an in-depth look at the three child projects for the purpose of learning more about project dependencies. Check it out!
In the last installment of our Development Series Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA, we looked at the sample code that uses the tools discussed in this series. Now we're going to have a look at J2EE project structures and how Maven, a build process and code process management tool, works with them.
In the last installment of our Development Series Anatomy of an Enterprise Flex RIA, we looked at the tools we'll be discussing in this series. Now we're going to look at the sample code that uses those tools as a way to show Flex working in an enterprise setting. Ready to dig in? We've got sample code and full specs...
In this series, we’ll look at a small application that integrates the technologies of LCDS and EJB 3.0, and we’ll cover some timesaving tools as well as discuss how to use them to achieve a lightweight development environment for integrating an RIA with an enterprise environment. Ready to get started? First, a look at the tools a developer needs to follow along at home



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