Book Image

Spring MVC Blueprints

By : Sherwin John C. Tragura
Book Image

Spring MVC Blueprints

By: Sherwin John C. Tragura

Overview of this book

Spring MVC is the ideal tool to build modern web applications on the server side. With the arrival of Spring Boot, developers can really focus on the code and deliver great value, leveraging the rich Spring ecosystem with minimal configuration. Spring makes it simple to create RESTful applications, interact with social services, communicate with modern databases, secure your system, and make your code modular and easy to test. It is also easy to deploy the result on different cloud providers. This book starts all the necessary topics in starting a Spring MVC-based application. Moving ahead it explains how to design model objects to handle file objects. save files into a data store and how Spring MVC behaves when an application deals with uploading and downloading files. Further it highlights form transactions and the user of Validation Framework as the tool in validating data input. It shows how to create a customer feedback system which does not require a username or password to log in. It will show you the soft side of Spring MVC where layout and presentation are given importance. Later it will discuss how to use Spring Web Flow on top of Spring MVC to create better web applications. Moving ahead, it will teach you how create an Invoice Module that receives and transport data using Web Services By the end of the book you will be able to create efficient and flexible real-time web applications using all the frameworks in Spring MVC.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Spring MVC Blueprints
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Summary


This chapter has presented valid and popular solutions for how to integrate Spring 4.x MVC applications, with different rendition features aside from JSP views. Although there are many possible study areas, this chapter chose to study the feasibility of human resource management systems written in Spring, with all their involved reports and data analysis. With the proper memory management, the prototype has proven the ability of the framework to render data into charts or graphs, which can be downloaded in PDF or in an image format. The project also studied the feasibility of integrating the software to RSS feeds and Atom publishing protocol, which are a modern-day trick for checking updates on published sites. But the most interesting is highlighted in the different rendition generation we see in JasperReports and DynamicReports which many companies are doing nowadays.