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Spring MVC Beginner's Guide

You're reading from   Spring MVC Beginner's Guide Your ultimate guide to building a complete web application using all the capabilities of Spring MVC

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783284870
Length 304 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Amuthan Ganeshan Amuthan Ganeshan
Author Profile Icon Amuthan Ganeshan
Amuthan Ganeshan
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Configuring a Spring Development Environment 2. Spring MVC Architecture – Architecting Your Web Store FREE CHAPTER 3. Control Your Store with Controllers 4. Working with Spring Tag Libraries 5. Working with View Resolver 6. Intercept Your Store with Interceptor 7. Validate Your Products with a Validator 8. Give REST to Your Application with Ajax 9. Apache Tiles and Spring Web Flow in Action 10. Testing Your Application A. Using the Gradle Build Tool B. Pop Quiz Answers Index

The web application context

In a Spring-based application, our application objects live within an object container. This container creates objects and associations between objects, and manages their complete life cycle. These container objects are called Spring-managed beans (or simply beans), and the container is called an application context in the Spring world.

A Spring container uses dependency injection (DI) to manage the beans that make up an application. An application context (org.springframework.context.ApplicationContext) creates beans and associate beans together based on the bean configuration and dispenses beans on request. A bean configuration can be defined via an XML file, annotation, or even via Java configuration classes. We will use only XML- and annotation-based bean configurations in our chapters.

A web application context is the extension of an application context, designed to work with the standard servlet context (javax.servlet.ServletContext). A web application context...

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Spring MVC Beginner's Guide
Published in: Jun 2014
Publisher:
ISBN-13: 9781783284870
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