Hi Koushik, Just want to tell you that out of all the tutorials, documentation and examples I have gone through, your videos were one of those which had a huge impact on my understanding of topics. I don't think any words could express the gratitude and happiness I feel, after learning from your videos. Thank you... for your time and amazing work.
Hi Koushik, The way you explain is really nice can you please create one same video with gradle please . As maven is getting outdated and client is asking for gradle.
I've completed this tutorial series now implementing caching using EhCache framework in this simple spring boot application. But, caching isn't working. can you please tell me how to implement caching in the same project.
If you're into java development and don't know what a jar is at this point, you might wanna revisit your basics. In simple terms, a jar is just a set of compiled java files. Many applications themselves turn out to become jars(such as spring boot) once completed. When using dependencies, you basically download these pre-built jars to your classpath so your application can acces them. This saves you from having to deal with a lot of standard operations like parsing xml, testing & mocking, managing database access etc. yourself in your program, and you can focus on what to do with the data in those xml files or databases instead of trying to re-invent the wheel. Al lot of this stuff is already written and by adding the jars you can be sure is pretty bug free, tested AND most importantly: uniform. So instead of every programmer writing his own classes to access a database, they'll use a JPA and wherever they go in their career, if they have learned to use JPA they can use that knowledge. This will make developing applications a lot easier and if you have to work on somebody else's application, you can be confident you won't have to deal with their custom way of accessing a relational database.
Hi Koushik,
Just want to tell you that out of all the tutorials, documentation and examples I have gone through, your videos were one of those which had a huge impact on my understanding of topics. I don't think any words could express the gratitude and happiness I feel, after learning from your videos. Thank you... for your time and amazing work.
Hello Koushik, Its been many years since i am following your video lessons, your way of teaching is grate, thank you very much.
Best explanation of Maven yet!
Great Starting Course It was really helpful for me! Thanks and see you at next courses!
Chapter 7: Environment setup With Spring Framework and Maven
Completed
Thanks sir :)
Sir, this is awesome and so are you. Learning made simple.
Hi Koushik,
The way you explain is really nice can you please create one same video with gradle please . As maven is getting outdated and client is asking for gradle.
The best tutorail out there
Is pom.xml to java similar to package.json to frontend?
Thats correct.
Thanks JavaBrains Team :)
Great Teacher!
I agree, he has natural ability to explain
Nice videos. This cours is awsome
why not gradle?
Are these video contents up to date as of 2022?
i've forget that .jar sounds just like name of that glass thing in which you store food
or har if you're spanish.
great content
I've completed this tutorial series now implementing caching using EhCache framework in this simple spring boot application.
But, caching isn't working. can you please tell me how to implement caching in the same project.
Thanks! Great video.
What is a "jar" file? It has something to do with dependencies but I don't understand
If you're into java development and don't know what a jar is at this point, you might wanna revisit your basics. In simple terms, a jar is just a set of compiled java files. Many applications themselves turn out to become jars(such as spring boot) once completed.
When using dependencies, you basically download these pre-built jars to your classpath so your application can acces them. This saves you from having to deal with a lot of standard operations like parsing xml, testing & mocking, managing database access etc. yourself in your program, and you can focus on what to do with the data in those xml files or databases instead of trying to re-invent the wheel. Al lot of this stuff is already written and by adding the jars you can be sure is pretty bug free, tested AND most importantly: uniform.
So instead of every programmer writing his own classes to access a database, they'll use a JPA and wherever they go in their career, if they have learned to use JPA they can use that knowledge. This will make developing applications a lot easier and if you have to work on somebody else's application, you can be confident you won't have to deal with their custom way of accessing a relational database.
You are a Treasure Man :) !
Why is it called a Maven project in Java, but they don't call it a NPM project in javascript?
Bro please make more projects with maven
spring and please with spring using gradle
Awesome!!
Thanks for these videos.
Also, at the beginning of the video, keep hitting left arrow really fast, it is funny :-)
You don't need to show yourself while explaining. I have to cover you by something.
lol. why do you need to cover him?
@@zippy.gaurav he might fall in love
You're a weird dude...