persistpərˈsɪst, -ˈzɪst
persist (v)
- present
- persists
- past
- persisted
- past participle
- persisted
- present participle
- persisting
English Definitions:
prevail, persist, die hard, run, endure (verb)
continue to exist
"These stories die hard"; "The legend of Elvis endures"
persevere, persist, hang in, hang on, hold on (verb)
be persistent, refuse to stop
"he persisted to call me every night"; "The child persisted and kept asking questions"
persist, remain, stay (verb)
stay behind
"The smell stayed in the room"; "The hostility remained long after they made up"
persist (Verb)
To go on stubbornly or resolutely.
persist (Verb)
To repeat an utterance.
persist (Verb)
To continue to exist.
persist (Verb)
To cause to persist; make permanent.
Persist
Persist is a Java-based ORM/DAO tool. It provides only the minimal amount of functionalities necessary to map objects or maps from database queries and to statement parameters. Persist works around a java.sql.Connection object. This means that it does not care about customer query languages, connection pool handling, transaction handling, and so on. This also means it is very flexible, and can be integrated with any code that depends on JDBC. Persist does not require explicit mappings from POJOs to database tables. As long as there is some sort of naming conventions that relate database names with POJO names, Persist will require virtually no mappings. It can, however, be instructed to map Java classes and fields to database tables and columns using annotations. Persist supports several different mapping strategies: POJOs mapped to tables By default, if no annotations specify a given class should not be mapped to a table, Persist will try to find a table that matches that class and create a mapping between fields and columns. POJOs not mapped to tables
Persist
Persist is a Java-based ORM/DAO tool. It provides only the minimal amount of functionalities necessary to map objects or maps from database queries and to statement parameters. Persist works around a java.sql.Connection object. This means that it does not care about customer query languages (it uses plain SQL with placeholders, as PreparedStatement objects use), connection pool handling, transaction handling (for the most part), and so on. This also means it is very flexible, and can be integrated with any code that depends on JDBC (including code that already use another ORM/DAO tool). Persist does not require explicit mappings from POJOs to database tables. As long as there is some sort of naming conventions that relate database names with POJO names, Persist will require virtually no mappings. It can, however, be instructed to map Java classes and fields to database tables and columns using annotations. Persist supports several different mapping strategies: POJOs mapped to tables By default, if no annotations specify a given class should not be mapped to a table, Persist will try to find a table that matches that class and create a mapping between fields and columns. POJOs not mapped to tables If a class is annotated with @NoTable, Persist will not try to map it to a table, and the class will only be able to hold data produced by queries. java.util.Map's Map's can be used to hold data from queries. Persist will convert values returned from the query to Java types. Keys in the table are the names of the columns returned in lower case. Java primitive types If a query returns a single column, Persist can map data directly into primitive types (either single values or lists):
Citation
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"persist." Kamus.net. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 23 Apr. 2024. <https://www.kamus.net/english/persist>.
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