The Maven Crash Course is designed to cut academic theory to just the key concepts and focus on basics tasks in Maven in order to be productive quickly. The lessons and examples provided are delivered in a step–by–step, detailed way to ensure mastery of the skills and topics covered.
Course Outline
Introduction walks through the course goals, approach and then define Maven.
After just a little bit of Theory in Core Concepts, we step through Maven Installation on Windows and Mac OS X.
In Setup and Getting Help, we cover how to ask for help in Maven. We also download the course working files on GitHub.
After the setup and installation of Maven, we get hands–on in Getting Started as we create our first Maven project keeping it simple with a minimal demo. Maven Basics covers additional concepts. The concepts are continued in Beyond the Basics as we look into dependencies, repositories and plugins within Maven. Then we improve our project by Unit Testing where we add JUnit tests, deal with (and avoid) testing failures. Finally, the last section of the main part of this course is dedicated to running Maven within Eclipse using the M2Eclipse plugin.
During the entire course, we get into a habit of saving our changes periodically using Git source control.
Instructor Details
Courses : 10
Specification: Maven Crash Course: Step-by-Step Introduction for Beginners
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11 reviews for Maven Crash Course: Step-by-Step Introduction for Beginners
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Price | $12.99 |
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Provider | |
Duration | 2.5 hours |
Year | 2019 |
Level | Beginner |
Language | English |
Certificate | Yes |
Quizzes | Yes |
$49.99 $12.99
Sowmya Srid –
Life Cycles can be elaborated a bit more
Rakesh Av –
Theory is good and there are few examples too.
S ren Juul –
All samples are based on Mac. There are no way Windows users can run the start.sh to build a basic project. This is of cause OK if it is mentioned and an alternative is given.
Shaowu Xu –
very good
Patryk Kaszuba –
1. The GitHub examples are deprecated, don’t work anymore. 2. The whole course is chaotic and don’t explain the basics, e.g. the general structure of the pom.xml file. 3. Too much mindless copying and pasting instead of writing the code from scratch and explaining each line during that. 4. The quality of additional materials and questions between sections is pathetic.
Rohit Bhosale –
clear basic concepts of maven.
Sonali Ghotkule –
yes, it was good
Rana De –
good
Sri Vardhana Korada –
Good Experience
Abhas Kumar Gorain –
Introduction to the core concepts was brushed over, without giving much detailed understanding of the need and the approach of the technology
Kritsadakorn Kongubol –
too many sections, please grouping