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From 0 to 1: Learn Java Programming -Live Free,Learn To Code

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  • 4,736 Students
  • Updated 2/2016
4.0
(223 Ratings)
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Course Information

Registration period
Year-round Recruitment
Course Level
Study Mode
Duration
16 Hour(s) 49 Minute(s)
Language
English
Taught by
Loony Corn
Rating
4.0
(223 Ratings)
2 views

Course Overview

From 0 to 1: Learn Java Programming -Live Free,Learn To Code

An accessible yet serious guide to Java programming for everyone

  • Taught by a Stanford-educated, ex-Googler, husband-wife team
  • This course will use Java and an Integrated Development Environment (IDE). Never fear, we have a detailed video on how to get this downloaded and set up.
  • Hundreds of lines of source code, and hundreds of lines of comments - just download and open in your IDE!

A Java course for everyone - accessible yet serious, to take you from absolute beginner to an early intermediate level

Let’s parse that.

  • This is a Java course for everyone. Whether you are a complete beginner (a liberal arts major, an accountant, doctor, lawyer) or an engineer with some programming experience but looking to learn Java - this course is right for you.
  • The course is accessible because it assumes absolutely no programming knowledge, and quickly builds up using first principles alone
  • Even so, this is a serious Java programming class - the gradient is quite steep, and you will go from absolute beginner to an early intermediate level
  • The course is also quirky. The examples are irreverent. Lots of little touches: repetition, zooming out so we remember the big picture, active learning with plenty of quizzes. There’s also a peppy soundtrack, and art - all shown by studies to improve cognition and recall.

What's Covered:

  • Programming Basics: What programming is, and a carefully thought-through tour of the basics of any programming. Installing and setting up an IDE and writing your first program
  • The Object-Oriented Paradigm: Classes, Objects, Interfaces, Inheritance; how an OO mindset differs from a functional or imperative programming mindset; the mechanics of OO - access modifiers, dynamic dispatch, abstract base classes v interfaces. The underlying principles of OO: encapsulation, abstraction, polymorphism
  • Threading and Concurrency: A deep and thorough study of both old and new ways of doing threading in Java: Runnables, Callables, Threads, processes, Futures, Executors.
  • Reflection, Annotations: The how, what and why - also the good and bad
  • Lambda Functions: Functional constructs that have made the crossover into the mainstream of Java - lambda functions, aggregate operators.
  • Modern Java constructs: Interface default methods; properties and bindings too. Also detailed coverage of Futures and Callables, as well as of Lambda functions, aggregation operators. JavaFX as contrasted with Swing.
  • Packages and Jars: The plumbing is important to understand too.
  • Language Features: Serialisation; why the Cloneable interface sucks; exception handling; the immutability of Strings; the Object base class; primitive and object reference types; pass-by-value and pass-by-object-reference.
  • Design: The MVC Paradigm, Observer and Command Design Patterns.
  • Swing: Framework basics; JFrames, JPanels and JComponents; Menus and menu handling; Trees and their nuances; File choosers, buttons, browser controls. A very brief introduction to JavaFX.

Programming Drills (code-alongs, with source code included)

  • Serious stuff:
    • A daily stock quote summariser: scrapes the internet, does some calculations, and outputs a nice, formatted Excel spreadsheet.
    • A News Curation app to summarise newspaper articles into a concise email snippet using serious Swing programming
  • Simple stuff:
    • Support with choosing a programming environment; downloading and setting up IntelliJ.
    • Simple hello-world style programs in functional, imperative and object-oriented paradigms.
    • Maps, lists, arrays. Creating, instantiating and using objects, interfaces

Course Content

  • 9 section(s)
  • 84 lecture(s)
  • Section 1 You, Us & This Course
  • Section 2 Coding Is Like Cooking
  • Section 3 An Object-Oriented State of Mind
  • Section 4 Java Language Constructs: The Best Thing Since Sliced Bread
  • Section 5 Threading and Concurrency: A Lot Going On All At Once
  • Section 6 Functional Programming: Crossover Hits
  • Section 7 Recursion, Reflection, Annotations, Dates, Packages and Jars
  • Section 8 UI Programming: Swing, MVC, and JavaFX
  • Section 9 Some Interview Problems For Practice!

What You’ll Learn

  • Write Java programs of moderate complexity and sophistication (at an early to middling intermediate level)
  • Understand Object-Oriented programming concepts at the level where you can have intelligent design conversations with an experienced software engineer
  • Manage concurrency and threading issues in a multi-threaded environment
  • Create and modify files (including Excel spreadsheets) and download content from the internet using Java
  • Use Reflection, Annotations, Lambda functions and other modern Java language features
  • Build serious UI applications in Swing
  • Understand the Model-View-Controller paradigm, the Observer and Command Design patterns that are at the heart of modern UI programming
  • Gain a superficial understanding of JavaFX and Properties and Bindings
  • Understand the nuances of Java specific constructs in serialisation, exception-handling, cloning, the immutability of strings, primitive and object reference types

Reviews

  • S
    Sanjeet Biswas
    4.5

    Very well organized, rich in content and rightly paced course.

  • K
    Kimar Neves
    4.0

    As theoretical class, explanations are easy to follow and pretty elaborated. Only thing I was not satisfied it was the slow flow in the exercises. I am aware that repetition is a learning tool, but the exercises repeat very frequently concepts and explanation previously presented. And by repetition I mean literal repetition, there are no attempts to rephrase content or approach with a different example or words. Overall, pretty good course.

  • B
    Brendan Brecht
    5.0

    Excellent, albeit notably academic, introduction to Java. It harmonized well with my learning patterns. I suspect it will do the same for anyone with a propensity for conceptual learning enhanced by an indispensable side-kick of congealed learning through application. Maybe not for all, but I applaud the instructors for their knowledge and for their educational stylings. Thanks Loons! Signed, Fellow Loon.

  • S
    Surya Prakash Bhoi
    4.0

    This course is not for complete beginners. It is for people with little programming knowledge. Could have been more exhaustive in topic coverage. However, overall a decent course. And the annoying part is: whatever the tutor is saying, she writes everything on the white board (a kind of repetition).

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