Book Image

Spring MVC: Beginner's Guide - Second Edition

By : Amuthan Ganeshan
Book Image

Spring MVC: Beginner's Guide - Second Edition

By: Amuthan Ganeshan

Overview of this book

Spring MVC helps you build flexible and loosely coupled web applications. The Spring MVC Framework is architected and designed in such a way that every piece of logic and functionality is highly configurable. Also, Spring can integrate effortlessly with other popular web frameworks such as Struts, WebWork, Java Server Faces, and Tapestry. The book progressively teaches you to configure the Spring development environment, architecture, controllers, libraries, and more before moving on to developing a full web application. It begins with an introduction to the Spring development environment and architecture so you're familiar with the know-hows. From here, we move on to controllers, views, validations, Spring Tag libraries, and more. Finally, we integrate it all together to develop a web application. You'll also get to grips with testing applications for reliability.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Spring MVC Beginner's Guide - Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Web application context


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

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

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