 12 | You can run the application now by right clicking the Main.java node (in the [Package Explorer] window) and selecting Run As > Java Application. The expected output in the Eclipse [Console] window ... of the database file by opening it in the ObjectDB Explorer: This is the end of the tutorial. Learn more about ObjectDB and JPA by reading the Manual. |
 12 | You can run the application now by right clicking the Main.java node (in the [Package Explorer] window) and selecting Run As > Java Application. The expected output in the Eclipse [Console] window ... of the database file by opening it in the ObjectDB Explorer: This is the end of the tutorial. Learn more about ObjectDB and JPA by reading the Manual. |
 8 | Explorer: This is the end of the tutorial. Learn more about ObjectDB and JPA by reading the Manual. |
 8 | how to use the JPA Query Language (JPQL). Presents ObjectDB Tools: the Explorer |
 8 | name attribute has no specific role but might be presented in the ObjectDB Explorer and in logging |
 8 | file from the file system and dropping it on the WEB-INF/lib node in the Eclipse Project Explorer |
 8 | Operations on the database will be performed by an instance of a session bean (EJB) class that we will define in this step: Open the [New Java Class] dialog box by right clicking the guest package node (in the [Package Explorer] window) and selecting New > Class. The package name should be guest |
 8 | In this step we will add the JSP that generates the guestbook HTML output: Open the [New JSP File] dialog box by right clicking WEB-INF under src/main/webapp (in the [Package Explorer] window), selecting New > Other... > Web > JSP File and clicking Next. The parent folder should be WEB-INF |
 8 | [], etc.) are not tracked automatically by default. Not all the features of the old 1.0 Explorer are already supported. |
 8 | in the [Data Explorer] window (under the data set node) and dropping them on the second table row |