I hear a lot about spring, people are saying all over the web that Spring is good framework for web development. But what exactly is it for? How can I use it for my Web-Java application any examples.
|
|
Basically Spring is a framework for dependency-injection which is a pattern that allows to build very decoupled systems. I'll try to explain you the simplest I can (this isn't a short answer). The problemFor example, suppose you need to list the users of the system and thus declare an interface called
And maybe an implementation accessing a database to get all the users:
In your view you'll need to access an instance (just an example, remember):
Note that the code above doesn't have initialized the variable
...I'd couple the view with my implementation of the class that access the DB. What if I want to switch from the DB implementation to another that gets the user list from a comma-separated file (remember, it's an example)? In that case I would go to my code again and change the last line by:
This has no problem with a small program like this but... What happens in a program that has hundreds of views and a similar number of business classes. The maintenance becomes a nightmare! Spring (Dependency Injection) approachWhat Spring does is to wire the classes up by using a XML file, this way all the objects are instantiated and initialized by Spring and injected in the right places (Servlets, Web Frameworks, Business classes, DAOs, etc, etc, etc...). Going back to the example in Spring we just need to have a setter for the
This way when the view is created it magically will have a
It is great! Isn't it?
There are some other options for Dependency Injection around there, what in my opinion has made Spring so famous besides its simplicity, elegance and stability is that the guys of SpringSource have programmed many many POJOs that help to integrate Spring with many other common frameworks without being intrusive in your application. Also Spring has several good subprojects like Spring MVC, Spring WebFlow, Spring Security and again a loooong list of etceteras. Hope this helps. Anyway, I encourage you to read Martin Fowler's article about Dependency Injection and Inversion of Control because he does it better than me. After understanding the basics take a look to Spring Documentation, in my opinion is the best Spring book ever. |
|||||||||||||||||||
|
|
Very short summarized, I will say that Spring is the "glue" in your application. It's used to integrate different frameworks and your own code. |
|||
|
|
|
Spring contains (as skaffman rightly pointed out) a MVC framework. To explain in short here are my inputs. Spring supports seggregation of Service layer, web layer and business layer but what it really does best is "Injection" of Objects. So to explain that with an example consider the example below:
Now in your code you have a class called RoadTrip as follows
Now whenever you want a instance of Trip; sometimes you may want a SUV to initialize FourWheel or sometimes you may want Sedan. It really depends what you want based on specific situation. To solve this problem you'd want to have a Factory Pattern as creational pattern. Where a factory returns the right instance. So eventually you'll end up with lots of glue code just to instantiate objects correctly. Spring does the job of glue code best without that glue code. You declare mappings in XML and it initialized the objects automatically. It also does lot using singleton architecture for instances and that helps in optimized memory usage. This is also called Inversion Of Control. Other frameworks to do this are Google guice, Pico container etc. Apart from this Spring has validation framework, extensive support for DAO layer in collaboration with JDBC, I-batis and Hibernate (and many more). Provides excellent Transactional control over database transactions. There is lot more to spring that can be read up in good books like Pro Spring Following URLs may be of help too. |
||||
|
Spring is great for gluing instances of classes together. You know that your Hibernate classes are always going to need a datasource, Spring wires them together (and has an implementation of the datasource too). Your data access objects will always need Hibernate access, Spring wires the Hibernate classes into your DAOs for you. Additionally, Spring basically gives you solid configurations of a bunch of libraries, and in that, gives you guidance in what libs you should use. Spring is really a great too. (I wasn't talking about Spring MVC, just the base framework). |
|||
|
|
|
What you'd probably want in a web application with Spring -
In addition, Spring is HUGE - so there are a lot of other things you might be interested in using in a web app such as Spring AOP or Spring Security. But the four things listed above describe the common components of Spring that are used in a web app. |
|||
|
|
|
Spring started off as a fairly simple dependency injection system. Now it is huge and has everything in it (except for the proverbial kitchen sink). But fear not, it is quite modular so you can use just the pieces you want. To see where it all began try: It might be old but it is an excellent book. For another good book this time exclusively devoted to Spring see: It also references older versions of Spring but is definitely worth looking at. |
|||
|
|
|
Spring is a good alternative to Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB) technology. It also has web framework and web services framework component. |
|||
|
|
|
Spring is three things. Spring handles Dependency Injection and I recommend you read Martin Fowler's excellent introduction on dependency injection. The second thing Spring does is wrap excellent java libraries in a very elegant way to use in your applications. For a good example see how Spring wraps Task Executors and Quartz Scheduler. Thirdly Spring provides a bunch of implementations of web stuff like REST, an MVC web framework and more. They figure since you are using Spring for the first two, maybe you can just use it for everything your web app needs. The problem is that Spring DI is really well thought out, the wrappers around other things are really well thought out in that the other things thought everything out and Spring just nicely wraps it. The Spring implementations of MVC and REST and all the other stuff is not as well done (YMMV, IMHO) but there are exceptions (Spring Security is da bomb). So I tend to use Spring for DI, and its cool wrappers but prefer other stuff for Web (I like Tapestry a lot), REST (Jersey is really robust), etc. |
|||
|
|
|
I see two parts to this:
Note that you can perfectly well use Spring in a web application without using Spring MVC. I would say most Java web applications do this, while using other web frameworks like Wicket, Struts, Seam, ... |
|||
|
|
|
Well, this one is a bit technical... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spring_Framework But this one is a bit more friendly... |
|||||||
|
protected by Reigel Jan 24 '12 at 4:35
This question is protected to prevent "thanks!", "me too!", or spam answers by new users. To answer it, you must have earned at least 10 reputation on this site.