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Build a Derby calendar, Part 3: Using transactions and locking

Nicholas Chase has been involved in Web-site development for companies such as Lucent Technologies, Sun Microsystems, Oracle, and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He has been a high school physics teacher, a low-level radioactive waste facility manager, an online science fiction magazine editor, a multimedia engineer, an Oracle instructor, and the chief technology officer of an interactive communications company. He is the author of several books, including XML Primer Plus.

Summary:  In this final tutorial of the series, you'll finish the calendar and reminder application using the Java™ language and the Apache Derby database. In Part 1 and Part 2 of this three-part series, you created a basic calendar and reminder application using a Derby database back end and a GUI and a Web-based front end. Now that the proof of concept is complete, you can add a more friendly interface and use transactions and locking to create a truly multiuser system.

View more content in this series

Date:  27 Sep 2005
Level:  Intermediate PDF:  A4 and Letter (485 KB | 46 pages)Get Adobe® Reader®

Activity:  3349 views
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DescriptionNameSizeDownload method
Source code from Part 2part2source.zip8 KBHTTP
Source code for Part 3part3source.zip12 KBHTTP

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