Book Image

Spring Boot and Angular

By : Devlin Basilan Duldulao, Seiji Ralph Villafranca
5 (1)
Book Image

Spring Boot and Angular

5 (1)
By: Devlin Basilan Duldulao, Seiji Ralph Villafranca

Overview of this book

Angular makes building applications with the web easy and Spring Boot helps get an application up and running using just a few lines of code and minimal configuration. This book provides insights into building full-stack apps using Angular and Spring Boot effectively to reduce overall development time and increase efficiency. You'll start by setting up your CI/CD pipeline and then build your web application’s backend guided by best practices. You'll then see how Spring Boot allows you to build applications faster and more efficiently by letting the Spring Framework and Spring Boot extension do the heavy lifting. The book demonstrates how to use Spring Data JPA and add its dependencies along with Postgres dependencies in the project to save or persist a user's data in a database for future use. As you advance, you'll see how to write tests and test a service using Mockito. Finally, you'll create a CI workflow or pipeline for a Spring Boot and Angular application to enable operations to deliver quality applications faster. By the end of this Spring Boot and Angular book, you'll be able to build a full-stack web application and deploy it through continuous integration and continuous deployment.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
1
Part 1: Overview of Spring Boot and Angular Development
4
Part 2: Backend Development
12
Part 3: Frontend Development
19
Part 4: Deployment

Setting up IntelliJ IDEA with Java 17

We have installed our IDE (IntelliJ IDEA) and Java 17 on our machine in the previous sections. Now, we will guide you on how to configure Java 17 on new and existing projects.

Using Java 17 on new projects

We only need the following few steps to use Java 17 on our new Java project:

  1. Open your IntelliJ IDEA terminal and select File | New | New Project.
Figure 2.5 – Creating a new project in IntelliJ IDEA

Figure 2.5 – Creating a new project in IntelliJ IDEA

We will see the preceding modal and select the type of project we need to develop. We can also see that we can choose the SDK version we need for our project.

  1. We will use Java 17, so we need to select OpenJDK-17.
  2. Click Next and configure your project name and directory. This will set up your Java application with the chosen SDK version.

We have now successfully configured our new project with JDK 17. Now we want to configure existing projects with JDK 17.

Using Java 17 on...