more on XxxxNamingStrategy
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@ -309,14 +309,17 @@ annotations which we'll discuss below in <<mapping-entity-classes>>:
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| `hibernate.default_schema` | A default schema name for entities which do not explicitly declare one
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| `hibernate.default_catalog` | A default catalog name for entities which do not explicitly declare one
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| `hibernate.physical_naming_strategy` | A `PhysicalNamingStrategy` implementing your database naming standards
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| `hibernate.implicit_naming_strategy` | An `ImplicitNamingStrategy` which specifies how "logical" names of
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relational objects should be inferred when no name is specified in
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annotations
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|===
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[TIP]
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.Implement your naming standards as a `PhysicalNamingStrategy`
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====
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Writing your own `PhysicalNamingStrategy` is an especially good
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way to reduce the clutter of annotations on your entity classes, and
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we think you should do it for any nontrivial data model.
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Writing your own `PhysicalNamingStrategy` and/or `ImplicitNamingStrategy` is an especially good way to reduce the clutter of annotations on your entity classes, and we think you should do it for any nontrivial data model.
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Please refer to the Javadoc for these interfaces for more information about the division of responsibility between them.
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====
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=== Nationalized character data in SQL Server
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@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ Hibernate was the inspiration behind the _Java_ (now _Jakarta_) _Persistence API
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.The early history of Hibernate and JPA
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====
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The Hibernate project began in 2001, when Gavin King's frustration with Entity Beans in EJB 2 boiled over.
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It quickly overtook other open source and commercial contenders to become the most popular persistence solution for Java, and the book _Hibernate in Action_, written with Christian Bauer, was an influential best-seller.
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It quickly overtook other open source and commercial contenders to become the most popular persistence solution for Java, and the book _Hibernate in Action_, written with Christian Bauer, was an influential bestseller.
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In 2004, Gavin and Christian joined a tiny startup called JBoss, and other early Hibernate contributors soon followed: Max Rydahl Andersen, Emmanuel Bernard, Steve Ebersole, and Sanne Grinovero.
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