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

Chapter 2, Spring MVC Architecture - Architecting Your Web Store


Questions

Answers

Suppose I have a Spring MVC application for library management called BookPedia and I want to map a web request URL http://localhost:8080/BookPedia/category/fiction to a controller's method—how would you form the @RequestMapping annotation?

2.@RequestMapping("/category/fiction")

What is the request path in the following URL: http://localhost:8080/webstore/?

2./

Considering the following servlet mapping, identify the possible matching URLs:

@Override   
protected String[] getServletMappings() {   
   return new String[] { "*.do"};   
}   

3. http://localhost:8080/webstore/welcome.do

Considering the following servlet mapping, identify the possible matching URLs:

@Override    
protected String[] getServletMappings() {    
   return new String[] { "/"};    
}   

4. All the above

In order to identify a class as a controller by Spring, what needs to be done?

4. All of the above.