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jOOQ Masterclass

You're reading from  jOOQ Masterclass

Product type Book
Published in Aug 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800566897
Pages 764 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Anghel Leonard Anghel Leonard
Profile icon Anghel Leonard

Table of Contents (26) Chapters

Preface Part 1: jOOQ as a Query Builder, SQL Executor, and Code Generator
Chapter 1: Starting jOOQ and Spring Boot Chapter 2: Customizing the jOOQ Level of Involvement Part 2: jOOQ and Queries
Chapter 3: jOOQ Core Concepts Chapter 4: Building a DAO Layer (Evolving the Generated DAO Layer) Chapter 5: Tackling Different Kinds of SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, and MERGE Chapter 6: Tackling Different Kinds of JOINs Chapter 7: Types, Converters, and Bindings Chapter 8: Fetching and Mapping Part 3: jOOQ and More Queries
Chapter 9: CRUD, Transactions, and Locking Chapter 10: Exporting, Batching, Bulking, and Loading Chapter 11: jOOQ Keys Chapter 12: Pagination and Dynamic Queries Part 4: jOOQ and Advanced SQL
Chapter 13: Exploiting SQL Functions Chapter 14: Derived Tables, CTEs, and Views Chapter 15: Calling and Creating Stored Functions and Procedures Chapter 16: Tackling Aliases and SQL Templating Chapter 17: Multitenancy in jOOQ Part 5: Fine-tuning jOOQ, Logging, and Testing
Chapter 18: jOOQ SPI (Providers and Listeners) Chapter 19: Logging and Testing Other Books You May Enjoy

Hooking the DAO layer

DAO is a design pattern that stands for Data Access Object. Following the separation of logic principle, DAO separates the data persistence logic in a dedicated layer and abstracts away the low-level database operations. Typically, the DAO is sketched around three main components:

  • A model representing the data that is transferred between layers (for example, the Sale model corresponds to the SALE database table)
  • An interface containing the API that should be implemented for the model (for example, SaleDao, or in Spring terms, SaleRepository)
  • A concrete implementation of this interface (for example, SaleDaoImpl, or in Spring terms, SaleRepositoryImpl)

The following diagram represents the relationships between these components using Sale, SaleRepository, and SaleRepositoryImpl:

Figure 4.1 – DAO design pattern

If you are a JdbcTemplate fan, you most probably recognize this pattern in your own applications. On...

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