soapui
Auto
soapui | Auto | |
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13 | 14 | |
1,508 | 10,378 | |
0.9% | 0.3% | |
5.3 | 9.3 | |
about 2 months ago | 13 days ago | |
Java | Java | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
soapui
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Using Spring-WS to consume a SOAP API
Let's first try the service manually. We will use the SoapUI testing tool. After importing the WSDL, test requests are automatically created. There are two versions of the "SOAP binding" imported from the WSDL. We will use the newer one, SOAP 1.2. We just need to substitute the input number in the place of a question mark and we can invoke the web service:
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The 36 tools that SaaS can use to keep their product and data safe from criminal hackers (manual research)
SoapUI
- Best language for consuming and transacting with SOAP?
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Stress Testing with cURL
There are plenty of tools for stress testing, read RapidAPI, paw, SoapUI, Postman, rest-assured, JMeter and so on! I'm sure they are amazing, however that's all big and heavy, slow, sometimes paid tools!
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Don’t call it a comeback: Why Java is still champ
SoapUI: https://www.soapui.org/
- How do i generate a sample SOAP request for the inbound BPM interface to be able to trigger a BPM process with SOAP UI ?
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SOAP APIs Aren't Scary: What You Should Know Before You Build a SOAP Integration
SoapUI from SmartBear is a popular tool that gives you a great graphical UI for navigating through a WSDL. Popping open any operation gives you a sample request that you can fill in and execute from within their app:
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Postman Now Supports gRPC
I found SoapUI when I had to develop some SOAP services, but these days it also does REST etc just fine.
For someone like me who just does this occasionally I found it rather useful.
[1]: https://www.soapui.org
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Those of you who do web development in Ubuntu, I'm curious what tools you use.
Eclipse IDE (IntelliJ when I have to depending on the team) (oh and I use the Eclipse package download site, not the installer) Bash shell (WSL on Windows) Gnu CLI commands Dbeaver (although I tend to use the version in the repos) MySQL Workbench (although I tend to use the version in the repos) Meld (like it better than any other comparison tool for ad hoc visual file compares) Apache JMeter (performance testing) (I tend to download and run manually instead of the one in the repos) GIMP Wireshark (great for figuring out why someone's fancy REST client isn't passing JSON correctly) SoapUI (or Postman depending on the team, I prefer SoapUI - which does REST)
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Backend Developer Learning Path 2021
SOAP
Auto
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Any library you would like to recommend to others as it helps you a lot? For me, mapstruct is one of them. Hopefully I would hear some other nice libraries I never try.
I like to use AutoService to make using Java's ServiceLoader easier.
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Autowiring In Spring, its implementation, limitations, Best Practices and Considerations While Using It
I've also had great luck combining that with AutoValue to allow production vs test injections without the new Foo(thing, null, null, null, thing2, null, null) situation:
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Java records make Google's AutoValue mostly obsolete
AutoValue has posted a new doc comparing itself to Java record classes. (Records were new in Java 16, or earlier with --enable-preview.)
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Don’t call it a comeback: Why Java is still champ
That means I don't forget about fields (as can happen if you're just doing `person.setX()` all the time). It's easy to see what is what when reading it. I can delete fields I don't want to initialize at the time. Yes, maybe immutable objects are the One True Way, but C# lets me choose (I can label properties with an initializer `init` rather than a setter `set` and then they're immutable).
Kotlin offers stuff like this too because it's really useful toward creating code that's easy to create and maintain. Go also lets you initialize structs in a similar fashion.
Java has come back to us a decade or more late with records. They're not bad, but they're only offering one thing. They don't cover what C#, Kotlin, Go, and other languages have offered for so long.
The annoying thing about Java is that it doesn't feel pragmatic a lot of the time. It feels like the language hates stealing ideas from others. It's Java: people steal ideas from Java, not the other way around. People do crazy things just to get POJOs including Immutables (http://immutables.github.io), AutoValue (https://github.com/google/auto/), Lombok (https://projectlombok.org), Joda Beans (https://www.joda.org/joda-beans/), and maybe more. They generate lots of code at compile time or do funky runtime stuff.
It just feels like Java misses the pragmatic stuff and still kinda doesn't want to handle that. I feel a bit silly harping on things like POJOs and setting data on a new object, but that's a big part of day-to-day stuff and it definitely pushes users away from Java towards languages that seem "better" simply because they don't have Java's oddly strong attachment to not offering simple value objects. Yes, again, records do something - but it feels like Java ignored how people are using Kotlin, Go, C#, and more and didn't go for something that would have been as widely applicable and pragmatic as it could have been.
Java has a lot of great stuff like great GCs (yes), lots of cool research, great performance, and Project Loom is really exciting. I just wish the language would lean a little more practical.
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poor java
The main disadvantage of Java is the boilerplate and the fact that you don't get cool metaprogramming features. The boilerplate can be reduced with tools like AutoValue. The lack of monkey patching and crazy SFINAE template shenanigans is that it is much easier to look at some piece of code and know what it's calling. You have static types, so you can jump to the method definition reliably (as opposed to Python), and there aren't many subtle syntax features that can trip you up (like lvalue vs rvalue references in C++). You can absolutely make a mess of Java with crazy frameworks, but the fact that the language itself has simple syntax means that nobody else in the organization can do anything too clever.
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TclTutor 3: Computer aided instruction package for learning the Tcl language
There is no way you can tell that's valid Common Lisp without actually compiling and executing the code in the json-reader.lisp file. When the compiler gets to (enable-json-syntax), it sees that it is a macro so it executes its code at compile-time. That code then redefines the meaning of the { and [ characters to be the start of JSON objects/arrays (instead of their normal meaning in Common Lisp), and installs code telling Common Lisp how to parse JSON syntax, which is triggered when those characters are encountered in input. The example-object function shows an example of using it. Finally, (disable-json-syntax) is another macro, also executed at compile time, which undoes those changes to the Common Lisp syntax.
Common Lisp did not invent the idea of allowing a program to dynamically alter the language syntax as it was being parsed; I believe the idea was first introduced in Maclisp, and from there spread to other LISP dialects (such as Franz Lisp and Interlisp) before finally being standardised in Common Lisp. The originators of Scheme intentionally decided to leave this feature out, but some implementations/descendants of Scheme have added it back in, such as Racket [1], Guile [2], and Chicken Scheme [3]. Other Lisp-family languages (such as Clojure or Emacs Lisp) have resisted calls to add it, despite encouragement from certain quarters.
Earlier you spoke of "Tcl's lack of a grammar up against Scheme, Lisp", but if runtime-extensible syntax is a form of "lack of a grammar", then many Lisp family languages lack grammar too.
Another language for which this is true (albeit to a significantly lesser degree), is Java. With Java, you can run arbitrary code at compile time by defining an annotation processor. The annotation processor code is run when the annotation is encountered. The annotation processor is allowed to issue compilation errors. It can also generate more source code for additional classes, which gets added to the compilation process, and your program may refer some of those generated classes, and hence need that generated code to compile–for an example see [4] from the Google AutoValue docs, where the "AutoValue_Animal" class being constructed in the create() method is dynamically generated by a processor which is triggered by the @AutoValue annotation. So, if your Java program contains annotations with an associated processor, and if you define "syntactically correct" as "compiles without any errors", then you can't know if the Java program is syntactically correct without executing arbitrary Java code.
[0] https://gist.github.com/chaitanyagupta/9324402
[1] https://docs.racket-lang.org/reference/Reader_Extension.html
[2] https://www.gnu.org/software/guile/manual/html_node/Reader-E...
[3] https://wiki.call-cc.org/man/5/Module%20(chicken%20read-synt...
[4] https://github.com/google/auto/blob/master/value/userguide/i...
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Magic Beans - automatic get/set, equals, hashCode, toString without any compiler hacks
Reminds me of Google’s AutoValue: https://github.com/google/auto/tree/master/value
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What are some of your tips for improving the Java development experience?
Records where you can, and because Lombok is controversial, Immutables is the other alternative (or autovalue). Actually, all code generation tools are fantastic: Immutables, MapStruct, jOOQ...
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So true
Via Lombok, yes, which, as of now, is a default plugin in Idea, which everyone is using anyway. If you don't like Lombok particularly (and god knows, I can't imagine why), there is an alternative made by Google called Auto. Or you can use Scala, which has some features like that natively and is 100% interoperable with Java (meaning you can make a new Scala file within the current project and start using it right away). I imagine Kotlin also has some syntax sugar; however, I am not familiar with Kotlin very well.
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How to Write an Equality Method in Java (2009)
For immutable value types, AutoValue[1] is a nice library for automating this. Lombok[2] is also popular, but a lot of orgs avoid it because it has some pretty deep dependencies on implementation details of the JDK that aren't guaranteed to be stable across releases. It seems well-maintained in practice, thoguh. Once Java records[3] are out of preview, they will probably be the preferred approach, but it will be a while before most teams are on a version of the JDK that supports them.
For mutable objects, the notion of equality is hairy in general, because what you want often depends on why you'd be comparing the two objects. You might have two mutable objects that can be meaningfully compared in your business logic, but absolutely should not be used as keys in a map. Often you can satisfy your goals by implementing a separate method that does not attempt to conform to the 'equals' contract, which ensures it will not unintentionally be used for e.g. data structure ordering.
[1] https://github.com/google/auto/blob/master/value/userguide/i...
[2] https://projectlombok.org/features/EqualsAndHashCode
[3] https://blogs.oracle.com/javamagazine/records-come-to-java
What are some alternatives?
grpc-browser - A web UI for browsing and executing gRPC operations in your .NET application
Lombok - Very spicy additions to the Java programming language.
httpyac - Command Line Interface for *.http and *.rest files. Connect with http, gRPC, WebSocket and MQTT
Immutables - Annotation processor to create immutable objects and builders. Feels like Guava's immutable collections but for regular value objects. JSON, Jackson, Gson, JAX-RS integrations included
weblaf - WebLaF is a fully open-source Look & Feel and component library written in pure Java for cross-platform desktop Swing applications.
JHipster - JHipster, much like Spring initializr, is a generator to create a boilerplate backend application, but also with an integrated front end implementation in React, Vue or Angular. In their own words, it "Is a development platform to quickly generate, develop, & deploy modern web applications & microservice architectures."
random-number - Simple JavaFx app in Java 11 with Spring boot as dependency injection framwork
Mockneat - MockNeat - the modern faker lib.
intellij-community - IntelliJ IDEA Community Edition & IntelliJ Platform
Tale - 🦄 Best beautiful java blog, worth a try
welk-lidwoord - Een app die je helpt met kiezen van het juiste lidwoord
JavaParser - Java 1-18 Parser and Abstract Syntax Tree for Java with advanced analysis functionalities.