Now, we understand the overall request flow and responsibility of each component in a typical Spring MVC application. However, this is not enough for us to build an online web store application. We also need to know the best practices to develop an enterprise-level web application. One of the best practices in a typical web application is to organize source code into layers, which will improve reusability and loose coupling. A typical web application normally has four layers: the presentation, domain, services, and persistence. So far, whatever we have seen, such as the dispatcher servlet, controllers, view resolvers, and so on, is considered a part of the presentation layer components. Let's understand the remaining layers and components one by one.
Spring MVC Beginner's Guide
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Spring MVC Beginner's Guide
By:
Overview of this book
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Spring MVC Beginner's Guide
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Free Chapter
Configuring a Spring Development Environment
Spring MVC Architecture – Architecting Your Web Store
Control Your Store with Controllers
Working with Spring Tag Libraries
Working with View Resolver
Intercept Your Store with Interceptor
Validate Your Products with a Validator
Give REST to Your Application with Ajax
Apache Tiles and Spring Web Flow in Action
Testing Your Application
Using the Gradle Build Tool
Pop Quiz Answers
Index
Customer Reviews