Jakarta Persistence
0 sources
Jakarta Persistence
Summary
Jakarta Persistence is an application programming interface[1]. It draws 46 Wikipedia views per month (application_programming_interface category, ranking #40 of 120).[2]
Key Facts
- Jakarta Persistence is the creator of Sun Microsystems[3].
- Jakarta Persistence is in the country of Estonia[4].
- Jakarta Persistence's instance of is recorded as application programming interface[5].
- Jakarta Persistence's instance of is recorded as technical specification[6].
- Jakarta Persistence's developer is recorded as Eclipse Foundation[7].
- Jakarta Persistence's GND ID is recorded as 7702016-9[8].
- Jakarta Persistence's copyright license is recorded as Eclipse Public License 2.0[9].
- Jakarta Persistence's copyright license is recorded as GPL linking exception[10].
- Jakarta Persistence's software version identifier is recorded as 2.2.3[11].
- Jakarta Persistence's software version identifier is recorded as 2.2.1[12].
- Jakarta Persistence's software version identifier is recorded as 2.2.2[13].
- Jakarta Persistence's software version identifier is recorded as 3.0.0[14].
- Jakarta Persistence's software version identifier is recorded as 3.1.0[15].
- Jakarta Persistence's software version identifier is recorded as 3.2.0[16].
- Jakarta Persistence's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/026dw9m[17].
- Jakarta Persistence's official website is recorded as https://jakarta.ee/specifications/persistence/[18].
- Jakarta Persistence's source code repository URL is recorded as https://github.com/eclipse-ee4j/jpa-api[19].
- Jakarta Persistence's Stack Exchange tag is recorded as https://stackoverflow.com/tags/jpa[20].
- Jakarta Persistence's Quora topic ID is recorded as Java-Persistence-API[21].
- Jakarta Persistence's implementation of is recorded as JSR 220[22].
- Jakarta Persistence's copyright status is recorded as copyrighted[23].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Jakarta Persistence is the creator of Sun Microsystems[3].
Why It Matters
Jakarta Persistence draws 46 Wikipedia views per month (application_programming_interface category, ranking #40 of 120).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 15 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24] It is known by 14 alternative names across languages and contexts.[25]