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  2. Jakarta XML Binding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_XML_Binding

    The tool "xjc" can be used to convert XML Schema and other schema file types (as of Java 1.6, RELAX NG, XML DTD, and WSDL are supported experimentally) to class representations. [3]

  3. CICS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CICS

    Support for Spring Boot, Jakarta EE 8, Node.js 12. New JCICSX API with remote development capability. Security, resilience and management enhancements. CICS Transaction Server for z/OS 6.1 2022-04-05 [34] 2022-06-17 Support for Java 11, Jakarta EE 9.1, Eclipse MicroProfile 5, Node.js 12, TLS 1.3. Security enhancements and simplifications.

  4. .properties - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.properties

    This allows for using .properties files as resource bundles for localization. A non-Latin-1 text file can be converted to a correct .properties file by using the native2ascii tool that is shipped with the JDK or by using a tool, such as po2prop, [1] that manages the transformation from a bilingual localization format into .properties escaping.

  5. Jakarta Persistence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_Persistence

    The JPA was renamed as Jakarta Persistence in 2019 and version 3.0 was released in 2020. This included the renaming of packages and properties from javax.persistence to jakarta.persistence. Vendors supporting Jakarta Persistence 3.0: DataNucleus (from version 6.0) EclipseLink (from version 3.0) Hibernate (from version 5.5) OpenJPA (from version ...

  6. Apache Felix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Felix

    Jaas Support Boot Classpath Jar 1.0.2 Jaas Support Bundle 1.0.2 February 13, 2017 junit4osgi - maven plugin 1.0.0 May 1, 2009 junit4osgi - shell command 1.0.0 May 1, 2009 junit4osgi - swing gui 1.0.0 May 1, 2009 junit4osgi 1.0.0 April 30, 2009 Lightweight HTTP Service Complete 0.1.6 May 5, 2017 Lightweight HTTP Service Core 0.1.6 May 5, 2017

  7. Kotlin (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kotlin_(programming_language)

    The name is derived from Kotlin Island, a Russian island in the Gulf of Finland, near Saint Petersburg.Andrey Breslav, Kotlin's former lead designer, mentioned that the team decided to name it after an island, in imitation of the Java programming language which shares a name with the Indonesian island of Java.