Jakarta EE Security (formerly JSR 375) introduces the notion of identity stores. Here, learn how they are implemented by Jakarta EE platforms like Payara.
Discover why Jakarta EE, with the industry-wide adoption of microservices-based architectures, has become one of the most popular Java server-side frameworks.
Jakarta, formerly the Java Enterprise Edition (Java EE or J2EE), is the standardization of many important APIs used in enterprise and mobile Java applications.
The first part takes a look at the Maven setup of Querydsl framework with Java EE and Jakarta. The second part sheds light on Querydsl solution with Maven classifiers.