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A function using async/await can use as many await expressions as it wants, and each will be handled in the same way (though a promise will only be returned to the caller for the first await, while every other await will utilize internal callbacks). A function can also hold a promise object directly and do other processing first (including ...
The release on December 8, 1998 and subsequent releases through J2SE 5.0 were rebranded retrospectively Java 2 and the version name "J2SE" (Java 2 Platform, Standard Edition) replaced JDK to distinguish the base platform from J2EE (Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition) and J2ME (Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition). This was a very significant ...
Google made a wide deployment of standards-compliant, cross browser Ajax with Gmail (2004) and Google Maps (2005). [10] In October 2004 Kayak.com's public beta release was among the first large-scale e-commerce uses of what their developers at that time called "the xml http thing". [11] This increased interest in Ajax among web program developers.
Several mainstream languages now have language support for futures and promises, most notably popularized by FutureTask in Java 5 (announced 2004) [21] and the async/await constructions in .NET 4.5 (announced 2010, released 2012) [22] [23] largely inspired by the asynchronous workflows of F#, [24] which dates to 2007. [25]
The final release date of the JPA 1.0 specification was 11 May 2006 as part of Java Community Process JSR 220. The JPA 2.0 specification was released 10 December 2009 (the Java EE 6 platform requires JPA 2.0 [2]). The JPA 2.1 specification was released 22 April 2013 (the Java EE 7 platform requires JPA 2.1 [3]). The JPA 2.2 specification was ...
Its features include exponentiation operator ** for numbers, await, async keywords for asynchronous programming (as a preparation for ES2017), and the Array.prototype.includes function. [5] The exponentiation operator is equivalent to Math.pow, but provides a simpler syntax similar to languages like Python, F#, Perl, and Ruby.
java.nio (NIO stands for New Input/Output [1] [2]) is a collection of Java programming language APIs that offer features for intensive I/O operations. It was introduced with the J2SE 1.4 release of Java by Sun Microsystems to complement an existing standard I/O. NIO was developed under the Java Community Process as JSR 51. [3]
December 2030 for Oracle [10] December 2030 for Azul [3] March 2031 for BellSoft Liberica [6] Java SE 9 (1.9) 53: 21st September 2017: March 2018 — Java SE 10 (1.10) 54: 20th March 2018: September 2018 — Java SE 11: LTS: 55: 25th September 2018: April 2019 for Oracle