Sumario: | Fullstack developers often earn higher salaries and have more career opportunities than developers who only specialize in front- or backends. Creating a Simple Angular App expands your Java skills by teaching you to build reactive, responsive, functional frontends using the Angular framework. You don't need any existing knowledge of Angular or JavaScript-everything required to start building stunning frontends is covered in the course. By referencing Java and Java web technology examples, this course makes it quick and easy for Java developers to upgrade their skills to Angular. In the first in a running series of five videos, you'll learn what Angular is, how to install Angular and set up a development environment, and how to build your first simple application. about the subject The Angular framework is used by millions of developers, powering frontends from simple prototypes to Google's own web apps. Prized for its scalability, Angular also offers lightning fast speed and response times and the chance to reuse code for both web and mobile. Best of all, it can be integrated with backends built in Java. about the video Angular for Java Developers is a five-part course that teaches Java programmers how to use Angular and JavaScript to build applications that are maintainable, testable, and secure. In Part One, you'll get to grips with how Angular works, what an Angular application looks like, and get started by creating your first simple Angular app. The video lays the groundwork for the case study example app you'll build throughout all five videos, the architecture of Angular applications, as well as creating your own custom components. Inside: Part 1 of 5 videos covering Angular frontends for Java applications Building responsive and reactive front-ends with Angular Installing Angular and setting up a development environment Building your first simple application For viewers with basic Java experience. Matt Greencroft has over twenty years of experience as a programmer, primarily working in the banking sector. Matt now teaches for Virtual Pair Programmers. His specialties are Microservices, Spring Boot, Apache Spark and Kotlin.
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