Your tutorial style is great for beginners and experienced alike. Clear concise, and slow enough for beginners. That being said don't be afraid to rewind and rewatch as many times as it takes if you are just learning. Thank you for your effort.
This is the best Java tutorial I believe I would ever watch, straightforward, clear and concise, aligned explanation structure and perfect timing. You are a great tutor. Please keep this up! more great tutorials like this!!! ❤❤❤
Sir, I'm a java developer too, haha I love how you show the true power of this, bunch of people are triggered!! not knowing that almost all the things they are using for entertainment or utilities for the day-by-day, are written in java, like it or not! This shows how many people are coding without clean architecture/proper modeling, I wish I could give you thumbs up twice!
Damn your course is brilliant. No boring, generic examples, but perfectly understandable references. Have consumed x courses and books alongside my education, but this video tops everything I've seen so far. Feel honored and thank you very much!
These are THE videos needed for skill transfer. Your intro video helped me a lot. Needed to learn basics of java for a course. I already know C, Python, Dart. So just needed to get familiar with syntax and other small things.
As an Android/Kotlin dev this was really helpful! I started out on Python (I know I know) so I never got that used to Java and all it's intricacies. This was a really great refresher, would love more videos on Java going forward
I am about to take a course on Advanced Object Oriented Programming using Java for school and am trying to get as far ahead as possible so I don't have to struggle through it like I have in the past. I've got a feeling this video is going to teach me a ton, so thanks in advance!
Thanks a lot for the learn Java series. A lot of info in less than 1 hour compared to 20 hours of "crush courses" out there. I'm a Frontend dev who learns Java for an upcoming Software Engineer job but I still can't wrap my head around how and where to apply Java (perhaps I'll figure out once I'm out in the office). I have experience with backend languages like Python and Nodejs with which I can build simple REST API in less than 30 minutes but I struggle to do the same with Java (or just find a proper tutorial, there are Spring and Spring Boot but it's a dark forest for me right now). Would love to see smth like Java for Frontenders. I like your style, thanks.
Awesome explanation of Java's object-oriented concepts with practical examples! Videos like this make learning programming so much easier. For kids who want to explore coding and technology in a fun and interactive way, Moonpreneur is a great platform to kickstart their journey.
People will be shit talking java, but at the end of the day, from legacy applications to new microservices driven backends with spring, java will always remain a solid choice! Also, as an idee, it will be really cool a course on build systems like gradle
on the topic of OOP, i think a really cool thing would be to show the performance and power of java by doing a small little game with libgdx or something. I love java, all my backend friends love java, but every time i try learning it i get overwhelmed. my max on language complexity seems to be c#.(i use javascript,python, and c#)
This is the video I wish I had years ago. Dispelling the complexity of the four pillars into simple and concise practical implementations, which hours of tutorials have failed to do for me. Ngl tho that overloading example was a bit janky! More Java please!
Shouldn't we make Inventory a singleton? I know this is a beginner tutorial explaining the four pillars of oop and all, but it's such a good example for singletons. Also, would implementing adding quantity of items be a good overloading use case? Ugh, can't really work through the potential implementation atm. But, basically you'd have a method for fruit that has to first check the inventory for the specific fruit and then, if it exists, just add the quant. Would kinda require a differentiation between stackable/unstackable items to justify an overload, I guess. I'm not sure about any of this. It's been years since I've done any programming. 😬 Just started getting into it again and I am starting to remember why I stopped trying to learn in the first place. 😅
Thank you for your tutorial, I love your teaching style. Do you have examples where compile time polymorphism leads to better performance/readability than runtime polymorphism please?
My guy saying he'll teach you about OOP, and then catch him talking about "private protected" while the attribute he's referring to is in fact, private but NOT protected. Which is a big deal to know the difference. And you're just making java more confusing than it already is for beginners.
If the Item class implements ItemStuff, and Food extends Item, that means ultimately Food implements ItemStuff, right? And then you just the normal @Override if needed?
To me this stuff only makes sense in huge code bases. I can see an engineer saying "you know what we'll use OOP to stop creating the same functions for every data type and make stuff neater and interconnected". I see it as something that you implement once you have lots of moving parts going on in your code base.
Hi, I think it's better to use eclipse font colours instead of this intelli J one's because you can have different colour for things like Object, object name, keyword, text etc. Thanks!
I know this is 2 months late, but is there a benefit to using the overloading than using varargs? We currently use varargs to determine if we are on the server and need use localhost at the domain name or use the hostname for outside calls. We check if the length of the parmeter length is > 0 then use a conditional with what we do with it. We did it this way to prevent having two of the same methods since we have 5-10 methods per class and they all call on themselves as static methods with no main from triggers on NetIQ drivers that currently only handles one method call with specific parmeters.
Hope you read this. really wanna learn programing but my mind cant get the concept. Watching this video feel like watching a magic play. My question is: Any resource that can teach and let practice little by little which will help me practice the same concept as many I want until i move to the next?
So I tried the displayInventory method the same way you did but I got a message about non static item's not being able to be accessed from static ones?
Hi I am 3yoe and want to switch i have seen that MNCs are mostly looking for java. Can you make a video (roadmap) course even better which can help to showcase myself as a 3yoe java developer? (I learn most by building projects)
All language has its benifits and flaws. I think Python is on hype because its beginners friendly and since Covid everyone wants to learn coding and get into industry asap. I am in this industry since last 4 year's and I still haven't switched from Java. It has an amazing community support believe me.
the polymorphism example was just bad but i loved it, lol! another thing is i've never used interfaces, ever! maybe its because i'm still a learner but i've never found a case where i need to use it
@@adambickford8720 I think you are not familiar with modern dotnet core which is miles ahead of java right now. Java doesn't even have asynchronous programming yet.
@@md.redwanhossain6288 You are completely missing the point. Tech is only 1 consideration in languages. It's just like how the most powerful gaming console has never won a generation. I think you are the one that is uninformed tech-wise; java doesn't *need* async because it now has virtual threads. We get the benefits of async without method coloring of async or complexity of reactive.
@@adambickford8720 is there a good example of using java virtual threads cuz it confuses me like crazy i don't get it and react programming in java/spring
i make videos because i love it and want to give back to the community. It's also my job, but I can do anything else for a job. Those two reasons are why I made it my job.
This kind of video isn't for everyone certainly. The beginner to programming will find it too much too fast and it's certainly no in-depth coverage. But for someone who's coded in Java before and needs a quick refresher or who's already proficient in a different language like Python or Javascript who's just trying to get off the blocks quickly in Java, this kind of thing is just the ticket(I would also recommend Mike Dane's 45 minute Java in One Video made with the same intent)
@@fknight Sir I see you always as a successful programmer so I want to get ab advice from you, I stuck in tutorial hell , so could you please give me a free java ressources to learn fundamentals I mean from your experience, which free course would fit the need of today's market , please if u could give me a logical steps to follow for each free ressource. Thank you
no they dont suck lol. there are things you cant do without oop and there are things you shouldnt do with oop. thats why you choose your language and paradigm for your specific project.
Your tutorial style is great for beginners and experienced alike. Clear concise, and slow enough for beginners.
That being said don't be afraid to rewind and rewatch as many times as it takes if you are just learning.
Thank you for your effort.
This is the best Java tutorial I believe I would ever watch, straightforward, clear and concise, aligned explanation structure and perfect timing.
You are a great tutor. Please keep this up! more great tutorials like this!!! ❤❤❤
Sir, I'm a java developer too, haha I love how you show the true power of this, bunch of people are triggered!! not knowing that almost all the things they are using for entertainment or utilities for the day-by-day, are written in java, like it or not!
This shows how many people are coding without clean architecture/proper modeling, I wish I could give you thumbs up twice!
Damn your course is brilliant.
No boring, generic examples, but perfectly understandable references. Have consumed x courses and books alongside my education, but this video tops everything I've seen so far. Feel honored and thank you very much!
I'm almost begging for a more detailed version or even a continuation of this series! You make me love Java!
That's it
The timing of this video is magical. I was just about to search for some java videos and this found me before I could do anything. Much love.
thank you man, you explained it very clearly, better than a lot of professors. I think I am gonna write my exam tomorrow better than before
These are THE videos needed for skill transfer.
Your intro video helped me a lot. Needed to learn basics of java for a course. I already know C, Python, Dart. So just needed to get familiar with syntax and other small things.
imma slay my exam tomorrow love this
I need a an actual full course in java from you with activite you do and projects for begginers .Great Video
As an Android/Kotlin dev this was really helpful! I started out on Python (I know I know) so I never got that used to Java and all it's intricacies. This was a really great refresher, would love more videos on Java going forward
thank you very much for the video! we all appreciate your efforts!
Really great video. My teacher actually linked this in our class and it helped me out alot. Really helped me out alot. Keep up the good work!
Very clear and concise and most importantly, enjoyable to watch. Good job
WE NEED MORE...!
WE NEED MORE...!
WE NEED MORE...!
I am about to take a course on Advanced Object Oriented Programming using Java for school and am trying to get as far ahead as possible so I don't have to struggle through it like I have in the past. I've got a feeling this video is going to teach me a ton, so thanks in advance!
Thank you for this video! Hoping for more videos like this as I’m learning java again after 9years. You clearly explain it well. Love from PH
Dude makes bangers like it's nothing
Thanks a lot for the learn Java series. A lot of info in less than 1 hour compared to 20 hours of "crush courses" out there.
I'm a Frontend dev who learns Java for an upcoming Software Engineer job but I still can't wrap my head around how and where to apply Java (perhaps I'll figure out once I'm out in the office). I have experience with backend languages like Python and Nodejs with which I can build simple REST API in less than 30 minutes but I struggle to do the same with Java (or just find a proper tutorial, there are Spring and Spring Boot but it's a dark forest for me right now). Would love to see smth like Java for Frontenders.
I like your style, thanks.
This is really helpful! Many highschool curriculums such as the IB (and pretty sure AP) heavily lean towards java.
Awesome explanation of Java's object-oriented concepts with practical examples! Videos like this make learning programming so much easier. For kids who want to explore coding and technology in a fun and interactive way, Moonpreneur is a great platform to kickstart their journey.
This is really helpful and I like your perspective on how to go about these concepts in java 😊
Best refresher Ive seen to date.
People will be shit talking java, but at the end of the day, from legacy applications to new microservices driven backends with spring, java will always remain a solid choice!
Also, as an idee, it will be really cool a course on build systems like gradle
bro we need more videos like this for java
Thank you for this perfect explanation, better than a lot of professors. Slay.
Periooood
only 10k views? criminally underrated
Appreciate this!
Great channel 👍🏻
excellent video. Thanks.
on the topic of OOP, i think a really cool thing would be to show the performance and power of java by doing a small little game with libgdx or something. I love java, all my backend friends love java, but every time i try learning it i get overwhelmed. my max on language complexity seems to be c#.(i use javascript,python, and c#)
Very Nice Video!
This is the video I wish I had years ago. Dispelling the complexity of the four pillars into simple and concise practical implementations, which hours of tutorials have failed to do for me.
Ngl tho that overloading example was a bit janky!
More Java please!
Shouldn't we make Inventory a singleton?
I know this is a beginner tutorial explaining the four pillars of oop and all, but it's such a good example for singletons.
Also, would implementing adding quantity of items be a good overloading use case?
Ugh, can't really work through the potential implementation atm.
But, basically you'd have a method for fruit that has to first check the inventory for the specific fruit and then, if it exists, just add the quant.
Would kinda require a differentiation between stackable/unstackable items to justify an overload, I guess.
I'm not sure about any of this. It's been years since I've done any programming. 😬
Just started getting into it again and I am starting to remember why I stopped trying to learn in the first place. 😅
Please do something like this for Android :) Love the channel btw
thanks dude !
Thank you for your tutorial, I love your teaching style.
Do you have examples where compile time polymorphism leads to better performance/readability than runtime polymorphism please?
The instructor says you cannot store objects in array at 4:06 why is that ? We can have an array of objects right ?
Yes, arrays can store objects, the ArrayList uses arrays as an implementation detail.
My guy saying he'll teach you about OOP, and then catch him talking about "private protected" while the attribute he's referring to is in fact, private but NOT protected.
Which is a big deal to know the difference. And you're just making java more confusing than it already is for beginners.
English must not be your first language if you can't tell what he is meaning
@davidomar742 "protected" and "private" are two different access modifiers in Java.
Agreed, end of the video, I said wtf)))
Idk why he skipped all errors and made more complex example to understand the OOP
If the Item class implements ItemStuff, and Food extends Item, that means ultimately Food implements ItemStuff, right? And then you just the normal @Override if needed?
I believe arrays can actually store objects, its just that it's a fixed size?
I don't think I'm smart enough to learn from your tutorials, you're way too advanced for me.
To me this stuff only makes sense in huge code bases. I can see an engineer saying "you know what we'll use OOP to stop creating the same functions for every data type and make stuff neater and interconnected". I see it as something that you implement once you have lots of moving parts going on in your code base.
Hi, I think it's better to use eclipse font colours instead of this intelli J one's because you can have different colour for things like Object, object name, keyword, text etc. Thanks!
I want to learn java and i think it would be pretty good if u create a Udemy Java course 🙏🏿🙏🏿
I know this is 2 months late, but is there a benefit to using the overloading than using varargs? We currently use varargs to determine if we are on the server and need use localhost at the domain name or use the hostname for outside calls. We check if the length of the parmeter length is > 0 then use a conditional with what we do with it. We did it this way to prevent having two of the same methods since we have 5-10 methods per class and they all call on themselves as static methods with no main from triggers on NetIQ drivers that currently only handles one method call with specific parmeters.
Hope you read this. really wanna learn programing but my mind cant get the concept. Watching this video feel like watching a magic play. My question is: Any resource that can teach and let practice little by little which will help me practice the same concept as many I want until i move to the next?
You can make an array of objects
So I tried the displayInventory method the same way you did but I got a message about non static item's not being able to be accessed from static ones?
Please explain dependency injection
It would be great if u do such project based courses tnx and abt spring boot please 😢
Lets gooo
Hi
I am 3yoe and want to switch i have seen that MNCs are mostly looking for java. Can you make a video (roadmap) course even better which can help to showcase myself as a 3yoe java developer? (I learn most by building projects)
Arrays can't store Objects?
I beg to differ, so does Object[].
great video but also make python for us python nerds
Wow... i just learn the thing i'm about to learn in school for 2.5 month in half an hour at 3:00am...
do a intelliJ idea tutorial'
Is Java still valuable sir?
All language has its benifits and flaws. I think Python is on hype because its beginners friendly and since Covid everyone wants to learn coding and get into industry asap.
I am in this industry since last 4 year's and I still haven't switched from Java. It has an amazing community support believe me.
What IDE is this
intellij idea
brain hurts btw
the polymorphism example was just bad but i loved it, lol! another thing is i've never used interfaces, ever! maybe its because i'm still a learner but i've never found a case where i need to use it
17:35 telling us to take a shot everytime he says item and then saying more item than is actually in the code 💀
my brain just gpt memory leak
Too fast for me
C# so better ok terms of properties
For OOP, C# is way better than java. If you want to still write code for JVM, Kotlin is a better option.
Or Scala for the JVM, you can use Scala's OOP as a Java++ like Kotlin or uses its ML inspired Functional features.
Even better is getting paid. For that, java scales far better.
@@adambickford8720 I think you are not familiar with modern dotnet core which is miles ahead of java right now. Java doesn't even have asynchronous programming yet.
@@md.redwanhossain6288 You are completely missing the point. Tech is only 1 consideration in languages. It's just like how the most powerful gaming console has never won a generation.
I think you are the one that is uninformed tech-wise; java doesn't *need* async because it now has virtual threads. We get the benefits of async without method coloring of async or complexity of reactive.
@@adambickford8720 is there a good example of using java virtual threads cuz it confuses me like crazy i don't get it and react programming in java/spring
A
Jesse
Wow everything in this video is wrong about JavaScript, It's like he doesn't even know JavaScript.
Dude just makes videos just for the sake of making videos.
i make videos because i love it and want to give back to the community. It's also my job, but I can do anything else for a job. Those two reasons are why I made it my job.
And you comment for the sake of commenting. Get a life
This kind of video isn't for everyone certainly. The beginner to programming will find it too much too fast and it's certainly no in-depth coverage. But for someone who's coded in Java before and needs a quick refresher or who's already proficient in a different language like Python or Javascript who's just trying to get off the blocks quickly in Java, this kind of thing is just the ticket(I would also recommend Mike Dane's 45 minute Java in One Video made with the same intent)
@@fknight Sir I see you always as a successful programmer so I want to get ab advice from you, I stuck in tutorial hell , so could you please give me a free java ressources to learn fundamentals I mean from your experience, which free course would fit the need of today's market , please if u could give me a logical steps to follow for each free ressource. Thank you
Hey dude if you don't like the videos don't watch them go somewhere else
i hate java.
everyone wish me luck on my oop final on monday
Man, Java AND OOP just totally sucks…
no they dont suck lol. there are things you cant do without oop and there are things you shouldnt do with oop. thats why you choose your language and paradigm for your specific project.
Java does suck for you. But that does not mean it sucks for everywhere
skill issue
haha oop sucks???, good luck working professionally
@@Lykkos-321if it sucks than why are you looking for Java tutorials when you can look up at different videos