Duration 5 Days 30 CPD hours This course is intended for The primary audience for this course is as follows: Cisco Unified Communications system channel partners and resellers who are responsible for deployment and application engineering for Cisco Unified Contact Center Express customers. System and technical support engineers. Day 1 and Day 2 support personnel. Customers deploying and maintaining Cisco Unified CCX Overview Upon completing this course, the learner will be able to meet these overall objectives: Review Cisco Unified CCX environment components Create prompt recording tools Create a helpdesk script Apply common sense principles for scripting and system management, such as: Prompt, document, and grammar management Using the default script Scripting for proper call termination and ending a script Abandon rates Exception handling Check Agent Availability before and after entering queue Using Java Methods for Holiday and Time of Day routing Setup access and use an external database Define and use skills Script for conditional routing Script for basic callback scenarios Setup and use enterprise data and session management Script for queuing and scheduled callback scenarios Building on the knowledge base and scripting experience learned in the UCCXD class, the student will explore advanced techniques in scripting and overall Cisco Unified CCX functionality. During this five day class the students will use advanced scripting to implement features that extend the functionality of Cisco Unified CCX using many of the tools that are already available in the premium version of the product. Students should expect to spend time using the script editor and other tools to create developer tools and enhanced scripts to provide for a more functional and user-friendly customer experience. Activities include creating prompt recording tools, applying common sense scripting principles, creating simple and complex ACD routing scripts, holiday routing, external database access, various callback scenarios such as non-queuing, queuing, and scheduled callbacks, defining and using enterprise data, passing data from one script to another using session management, and much more. Additionally, since this class focuses on complex scripting concepts, it requires the student to learn more about fundamental scripting requirements such as data manipulation and formatting, using variables and array variables, and using Java programming methods. Course Introduction Learner Prerequisite Skills and Knowledge Course Goal Course Objectives Course Flow General Administration Lab Diagram Please Introduce Yourself Lesson 1: Cisco Unified CCX Overview Components of the Cisco Unified CCX Environment Gateways Routers Cisco Unified Communications Manager Cisco Unified CCX Script Editor Cisco Finesse Cisco Unified Intelligence Center Cisco Unified CCX Agent External Servers Cisco Unified CCX System Cluster Components Engine Database Server Call Flow Terms The Call Flow The Debug Process Reactive Non-Reactive Lesson 2: Prompt Recording Utilities Prompt Recorder Emergency Message Recorder Lesson 3: Basic ACD Routing Review Script Steps used in a Simple ACD Routing Script Resource Group Routing Defining the Contact Service Queue Create a Simple ACD routing script Lesson 4: Common Scripting Concepts Prompt Management Using the Default Script Terminating a Call and Ending a Script Abandon Rates Exception Handling Script Interruptions Check Agent Availability before and after entering queue Using Java Methods for Holiday and Time of Day routing Lesson 5: Accessing an External Database Database architecture and supported databases Setting up the Database Subsystem Using Database script steps Lesson 6: Skills Based Routing Appling skills to agents Defining the Contact Service Queue Specifying the CSQ in the Script Lesson 7: Advanced ACD Routing Overflow Routing When to Overflow How to get the Data Needed for Making Decisions Describe Methods of Overflowing Lesson 8: Basic ACD Callback Options Setup the Email Subsystem Script for Email Notification Script for Leaving a Recorded Message Script for Callback when Queue Times have Decreased Lesson 9: Enterprise Data and Session Management Define Enterprise Data in Cisco Finesse Define a Call Variable Layout in Cisco Finesse Define ECC Variables in the script editor Set Enterprise Data in the script Define Session Management Setup Session Management Use Session Management to Pass Variable Information Between Scripts Lesson 10: Advanced ACD Callback Options Leave Queued Message with an Option for Callback Scheduled Callback
Bridge Novels and Structural Writing: The Giving Tree
¡Hola, amigos! On the 18th 19th and 20th of December (19:30 GMT) we will offer an online free conversation class. 20th December Levels C1 to C2. We will meet other students, get to know each other and, of course, practice Spanish. Come and meet us! We will be learning some Navidad vocabulary, talks about Spanish and latino traditions and of course we will have lot of fun. Book your place in our web! Levels: A1 to C2. Check the web to know the available days for each level.
¡Hola, amigos! On the 18th 19th and 20th of December (19:30 GMT) we will offer an online free conversation class. We will meet other students, get to know each other and, of course, practice Spanish. 19th December Levels B1 to B2. Come and meet us! We will be learning some Navidad vocabulary, talks about Spanish and latino traditions and of course we will have lot of fun. Book your place in our web! Levels: A1 to C2. Check the web to know the available days for each level.
¡Hola, amigos! On the 18th 19th and 20th of December (19:30 GMT) we will offer an online free conversation class. 18th December Levels A1 to A2. We will meet other students, get to know each other and, of course, practice Spanish. Come and meet us! We will be learning some Navidad vocabulary, talks about Spanish and latino traditions and of course we will have lot of fun. Book your place in our web! Check the web to know the available days for each level.
Do you participate in English-language meetings? Do you got to prepare an agenda in English? And is English your second language? This course is specifically for non-native English speakers needing skills in planning and participating in meetings.
Duration 1 Days 6 CPD hours This course is intended for Developers Overview The basics of and motivation for using the functional programming paradigmFeatures of the Scala languageWorking with variables in ScalaUsing Scala collectionsControlling code flow in ScalaImporting and using Scala code libraries Scala training course will teach students the key language concepts and programming techniques, essential for students to focus on the covered subjects without having to also learn a complex programming language at the same time. Scala Basics Scala Background Information Key Scala Concepts Programming in Scala Variables Scala Variables Numerical Boolean String Collections Tuples The Collections Hierarchy Sets Lists Arrays Maps Common Conversions Flow Control Looping Iterators Functions Passing Functions Collection Iteration Methods Pattern Matching Libraries Classes and Objects Packages Import Additional course details: Nexus Humans Just Enough Scala training program is a workshop that presents an invigorating mix of sessions, lessons, and masterclasses meticulously crafted to propel your learning expedition forward. This immersive bootcamp-style experience boasts interactive lectures, hands-on labs, and collaborative hackathons, all strategically designed to fortify fundamental concepts. Guided by seasoned coaches, each session offers priceless insights and practical skills crucial for honing your expertise. Whether you're stepping into the realm of professional skills or a seasoned professional, this comprehensive course ensures you're equipped with the knowledge and prowess necessary for success. While we feel this is the best course for the Just Enough Scala course and one of our Top 10 we encourage you to read the course outline to make sure it is the right content for you. Additionally, private sessions, closed classes or dedicated events are available both live online and at our training centres in Dublin and London, as well as at your offices anywhere in the UK, Ireland or across EMEA.
Duration 2 Days 12 CPD hours This course is intended for This introduction to Spring development course requires that incoming students possess solid Java programming skills and practical hands-on Java experience. This class is geared for experienced Java developers who are new to Spring, who wish to understand how and when to use Spring in Java and JEE applications. Overview Working in a hands-on learning environment, led by our expert practitioner, students will: Explain the issues associated with complex frameworks such as JEE and how Spring addresses those issues Understand the relationships between Spring and JEE, AOP, IOC and JDBC. Write applications that take advantage of the Spring container and the declarative nature of assembling simple components into applications. Understand how to configure the Spring Boot framework Understand and work on integrating persistence into a Spring application Explain Spring's support for transactions and caching Work with Spring Boot to facilitate Spring setup and configuration Apply Aspect Oriented Programming (AOP) to Spring applications Become familiar with the conditionally loading of bean definitions and Application Contexts Understand how to leverage the power of Spring Boot Use Spring Boot to create and work with JPA repositories Introduction to Spring Boot | Spring Boot Quick Start is a hands-on Spring training course geared for experienced Java developers who need to understand what the Spring Boot is in terms of today's systems and architectures, and how to use Spring in conjunction with other technologies and frameworks. This leading-edge course provides added coverage of Spring's Aspect-Oriented Programming and the use of Spring Boot. Students will gain hands-on experience working with Spring, using Maven for project and dependancy management, and, optionally, a test-driven approach (using JUnit) to the labs in the course. The Spring framework is an application framework that provides a lightweight container that supports the creation of simple-to-complex components in a non-invasive fashion. Spring's flexibility and transparency is congruent and supportive of incremental development and testing. The framework's structure supports the layering of functionality such as persistence, transactions, view-oriented frameworks, and enterprise systems and capabilities. This course targets Spring Boot 2 , which includes full support for Java SE 11 and Java EE 8. Spring supports the use of lambda expressions and method references in many of its APIs. The Spring Framework Understand the value of Spring Explore Dependency Injection (DI) and Inversion of Control (IoC) Introduce different ways of configuring collaborators Spring as an Object Factory Initializing the Spring IoC Container Configuring Spring Managed Beans Introduce Java-based configuration The @Configuration and @Bean annotations Define bean dependencies Bootstrapping Java Config Context Injection in Configuration classes Using context Profiles Conditionally loading beans and configurations Bean Life-Cycle Methods Defining Bean dependencies Introduce Spring annotations for defining dependencies Explore the @Autowired annotation Stereotype Annotations Qualifying injection points Lifecycle annotations Using properties in Java based configuration The @Value annotation Using the Candidate Components Index Introduction to Spring Boot Introduce the basics of Spring Boot Explain auto-configuration Introduce the Spring Initializr application Bootstrapping a Spring Boot application Working with Spring Boot Provide an overview of Spring Boot Introduce starter dependencies Introduce auto-configuration @Enable... annotations Conditional configuration Spring Boot Externalized Configuration Bootstrapping Spring Boot Introduction to Aspect Oriented Programming Aspect Oriented Programming Cross Cutting Concerns Spring AOP Spring AOP in a Nutshell @AspectJ support Spring AOP advice types AspectJ pointcut designators Spring Boot Actuator Understand Spring Boot Actuators Work with predefined Actuator endpoints Enabling Actuator endpoints Securing the Actuator Developing in Spring Boot Introduce Spring Boot Devtools Enable the ConditionEvaluationReport Debugging Spring Boot applications Thymeleaf Provide a quick overview of Thymeleaf Introduce Thymeleaf templates Create and run a Spring Thymeleaf MVC application Additional course details: Nexus Humans Spring Boot Quick Start | Core Spring, Spring AOP, Spring Boot 2.0 and More (TT3322) training program is a workshop that presents an invigorating mix of sessions, lessons, and masterclasses meticulously crafted to propel your learning expedition forward. This immersive bootcamp-style experience boasts interactive lectures, hands-on labs, and collaborative hackathons, all strategically designed to fortify fundamental concepts. Guided by seasoned coaches, each session offers priceless insights and practical skills crucial for honing your expertise. Whether you're stepping into the realm of professional skills or a seasoned professional, this comprehensive course ensures you're equipped with the knowledge and prowess necessary for success. While we feel this is the best course for the Spring Boot Quick Start | Core Spring, Spring AOP, Spring Boot 2.0 and More (TT3322) course and one of our Top 10 we encourage you to read the course outline to make sure it is the right content for you. Additionally, private sessions, closed classes or dedicated events are available both live online and at our training centres in Dublin and London, as well as at your offices anywhere in the UK, Ireland or across EMEA.
Duration 4 Days 24 CPD hours This course is intended for This in an intermediate-level Java development course geared for students experienced with Java and Spring programming essentials. This course does not cover Java or Spring development basics. Overview Working within in an engaging, hands-on learning environment, guided by our expert team, attendees will: Understand the ReactiveX specification Understand the basics of Reactive Programming Discuss the advantages and limitations of Observables Write a client application capable of handling Reactive events Apply operators to event streams to filter, modify and combine the objects emitted by event publishers Select the appropriate type of Event Source Use both Cold and Hot Observables Deal with backpressure problems in reactive programming Develop a reactive web application using Spring WebFlux Define application flows of a WebFlux application Use the WebClient API to work with both synchronous and streaming APIs Develop Unit and Integration tests to test WebFlux endpoints Creating a reactive REST endpoint Become familiar with the basics of WebSockets Create a WebSocket endpoint using Spring Create a WebSocket client Understand the basics of NoSQL Become familiar with the basics of MongoDB Understand how the data in MongoDB can be retrieved using a Reactive API Define Spring Data MongoDB repositories Query the MongoDB using Spring Data Define a reactive repository using MongoDB Explore the Spring Data R2DBC API to perform reactive CRUD operations against a relational database Spring Data reative allow us to implement database operations relying on Reative Programming APIs. While the Spring R2DBC initiative aims to bring reactive programming to relational databaes, several NoSQL databases already provide this possibility. After an introduction to NoSQL and the MongoDB, this courses covers the APIs available to communicate with this NoSQL database using both blocking and reactive APIs.Introdcution to Reactive Spring is a comprehensive Java training workshop geared for experienced developers who wish to explore concurrent, asynchronous and reactive programming APIs and techniques using Spring. After an introduction to reactive programming, Reactive Streams and the Project Reactor APIs, this course will show how this APIs are integrated into Spring. Spring 5 includes Spring WebFlux, providing a reactive programming model for web applications, including support for Reactive REST APIs. Spring WebSocket assists in the creation of web applications which provide a full-duplex, two-way communication between client and server. Introduction to Reactive Programming Reactive Manifesto Introduce ReactiveX ReactiveX implementations The Observer, Iterator pattern and functional programming Discuss hot and cold publishers Reactive Streams API Introduce the Reactive Streams specification Publisher and Subscribers java.util.concurrent.Flow Transformation of Messages (Processor) Controlling messages Tutorial: Setup Eclipse for Using Maven Introduction Introduce the Reactor Building blocks Flux and Mono Creating observables Subscribing to a stream Testing Event Sources (introduction) Testing reactive implementations StepVerifier : test sequence of emitted items Defining expectations TestPublisher: produce test data to test downstream operators Reactive Operators Introduce Operators Show the use of marble diagrams Explain some commonly used operators Callback operators Schedulers (Multithreading) Thread usage of subscriber and consumer Using the subscribeOn method Introduce the Scheduler interface Using the observeOn method Backpressure Strategies for dealing with Backpressure ?reactive pull? backpressure Exception Handling Handling errors in onError Exception handling strategies Using onErrorReturn or onErrorNext operators Using the retry operators The Global Error Handler Spring Data Review Quick review of Spring Data repositories Query return types Defining Query methods Pagination and sorting R2DBC Reactive Relational Database Connectivity DatabaseClient Performing CRUD operations Reactive Query annotated methods Spring WebFlux: Introduction Annotated Controllers Functional Endpoints WebFlux configuration Creating a reactive REST endpoint Defining flows Defining the application flow Actions Defining decision Navigating flows RouterFunction View Technologies View technologies Using Thymeleaf to create the view View Configuration Spring WebClient: Introduction to WebClient Working with asynchronous and streaming APIs Making requests Handling the response Lab: WebClient WebTestClient Testing WebFlux server endpoints Testing controllers or functions Define integration tests Introduction to Spring Reactive WebSockets Be familiar with the basics of WebSockets Understand the HTTP handshake and upgrade Name some of the advantages of WebSockets Defining the WebSocket WebSocket Message Handling WebSocketSession Implementing the WebSockethandler Creating a Browser WebSocket Client WebSocket STOMP Streaming (or Simple) text-orientated messaging protocol Introduce SockJS Connecting to the STOMP endpoint Configuring the message broker STOMP destinations Reactive WebSocket Reactive WebSocket support Implement the reactive WebSocketHandler BigData Introduce Big Data Explain the need for enhanced data storage Introduction to MongoDB JavaScript Object Notation Overview Introduce Binary JSON (BSON) Starting the database Creating Collections and Documents Executing ?simple? database commands Introduce the ObjectID Searching for documents using query operators Updating and deleting documents MongoDB Compass Spring and MongoDB MongoDB Support in Spring Data MongoClient and MongoTemplate Spring Data MongoDB configuration @EnableMongoRepositories Adding documents to the database The @Document and @Field annotations Polymorphism and the _class property The Criteria object Spring Data MongoDB MongoRepository Field naming strategy Using JSON queries to find documents The @PersistenceConstructor annotation Reactive Repositories with MongoDB Using reactive repositories ReactiveMongoTemplate RxJava or Reactor Additional course details: Nexus Humans Introduction to Reactive Spring (TT3355 ) training program is a workshop that presents an invigorating mix of sessions, lessons, and masterclasses meticulously crafted to propel your learning expedition forward. This immersive bootcamp-style experience boasts interactive lectures, hands-on labs, and collaborative hackathons, all strategically designed to fortify fundamental concepts. Guided by seasoned coaches, each session offers priceless insights and practical skills crucial for honing your expertise. Whether you're stepping into the realm of professional skills or a seasoned professional, this comprehensive course ensures you're equipped with the knowledge and prowess necessary for success. While we feel this is the best course for the Introduction to Reactive Spring (TT3355 ) course and one of our Top 10 we encourage you to read the course outline to make sure it is the right content for you. Additionally, private sessions, closed classes or dedicated events are available both live online and at our training centres in Dublin and London, as well as at your offices anywhere in the UK, Ireland or across EMEA.
Duration 4 Days 24 CPD hours This course is intended for This course is appropriate for anyone who wants to create applications or modules to automate and simplify common tasks with Perl. Overview Working within in an engaging, hands-on learning environment, guided by our expert web development, PHP practitioner, students will learn to: Create a working script that gets input from the command line, the keyboard, or a file Use arrays to store and process data from files Create formatted reports Use regular expressions Use the appropriate types of variables and data structures Refactor duplicate code into subroutines and modules What is available in the standard library Use shortcuts and defaults, and what they replace Introduction to Perl Programming Essentials is an Introductory-level practical, hands-on Perl scripting training course that guides the students from the basics of writing and running Perl scripts to using more advanced features such as file operations, report writing, the use of regular expressions, working with binary data files, and using the extensive functionality of the standard Perl library. Students will immediately be able to use Perl to complete tasks in the real world. Session: An Overview of Perl What is Perl? Perl is compiled and interpreted Perl Advantages and Disadvantages Downloading and Installing Perl Which version of Perl Getting Help Session: Creating and running Perl Programs Structure of a Perl program Running a Perl script Checking syntax and warnings Execution of scripts under Unix and Windows Session: Basic Data and I/O Numeric and Text literals Math operators and expressions Scalar variables Default values Writing to standard output Command line arguments Reading from the standard input Session: Logic and Loops About flow control The if statement and Boolean values Using unless and elsif Statement modifiers warn() and die() The conditional construct Using while loop and its variants Using the for loop Exiting from loops Session: Lists and Arrays The list data type Accessing array elements Creating arrays List interpolation Arrays and memory Counting elements Iterating through an array List evaluation Slices and ranges Session: Reading and writing text files File I/O Overview Opening a file Reading text files Writing to a text file Arrays and file I/O Using the <> operator Session: List functions Growing and shrinking arrays The split() function Splitting on whitespace Assigning to literal lists The join() function The sort() function Alternate sort keys Reversing an array Session: Formatting output Using sprintf() and printf() Report formatting overview Defining report formats The write() function Advanced filehandle magic Session: Hashes Hash overview Creating hashes Hash attributes Traversing a hash Testing for existence of elements Deleting hash elements Session: References What is a reference? The two ways to create references References to existing data References to anonymous data Dereferencing scalar, array, and ash references Dereferencing elements of arrays and hashes Multidimensional arrays and other data structures Session: Text and Regular Expressions String length The substr() function The index() and rindex() functions String replication Pattern matching and substitution Regular expressions Session: Raw file and data access Opening and closing raw (binary) files Reading raw data Using seek() and tell() Writing raw data Raw data manipulation with pack() and unpack() Session: Subroutines and variable scope Understanding packages Package and Lexical variables Localizing builtin variables Declaring and calling subroutines Calling subroutines Passing parameters and returning values Session: Working with the operating system Determining current OS Environment variables Running external programs User identification Trapping signals File test operators Working with files Time of day Session: Shortcuts and defaults Understanding $_ shift() with no array specified Text file processing Using grep() and Using map() Command-line options for file processing Session: Data wrangling Quoting in Perl Evaluating arrays Understanding qw( ) Getting more out of the <> operator Read ranges of lines Using m//g in scalar context The /o modifier Working with embedded newlines Making REs more readable Perl data conversion Session: Using the Perl Library The Perl library Old-style library files Perl modules Modules bundled with Perl A selection of modules Getting modules from ActiveState Getting modules from CPAN Using Getopt::Long Session: Some Useful Tools Sending and receiving files with Net::FTP Using File::Find to search for files and directories Grabbing a Web page Some good places to find scripts Perl man pages for more information Zipping and unzipping files