What does the Spring framework do? Should I use it? Why or why not?
Spring is a framework that helps you to "wire" different components together. It is most useful in cases where you have a lot of components and you might decide to combine them in different ways, or wish to make it easy to swap out one component for another depending on different settings or environments.
This is what I've always understood "dependency injection" to be.
I would suggest a different definition:
"Design your objects so that they rely on an outside force to supply them with what they need, with the expectation that these dependencies are always injected before anybody asks them to start doing their usual jobs."
Compare that against: "Each object is responsible for going out and finding everything and everybody it needs as it starts up."
it looks like it necessitates a whole bunch of XML configuration
Well, most of the XML (or annotation-based) stuff is telling Spring stuff like:
- When someone asks for "HammerStore", I want you to create an instance of
example.HammerStore
and return it. Cache the instance for next time, since there only needs to be one store.
- When someone asks for "SomeHammer", I want you to ask yourself for a "HammerStore", and return the result of the store's
makeHammer()
method. Do not cache this result.
- When someone asks for "SomeWrench", I want you to create an instance of
example.WrenchImpl
, Use the configuration setting gaugeAmount
and put it into the instance's setWrenchSize()
property. Do not cache the result.
- When someone asks for "LocalPlumber", I want to you create an instance of
example.PlumberImpl
. Put the string "Pedro" into its setName()
method, put a "SomeHammer" into its setHammer()
method, and put a "SomeWrench" into its setWrench()
method. Return the result, and cache the result for later since we only need one plumber.
In this way, Spring lets your connect components, label them, control their lifecycles/caching, and alter behavior based on configuration.
To facilitate [testing] I typically make (at least) two versions of a method : one that uses instance variables, and one that only uses variables that are passed in to the method.
That sounds like a lot of overhead for not a lot of benefit for me. Instead, make your instance variables have protected
or package visibility, and locate the unit tests inside the same com.mycompany.whatever
package. That way you can inspect and change the instance variables whenever you want during testing.
It's an established standard term of aspect-oriented programming. From Wikipedia:
In aspect and functional programming, advice describes a class of
functions which modify other functions when the latter are run; it is
a certain function, method or procedure that is to be applied at a
given join point of a program.
[...]
The term advice goes back to the term advising as introduced by Warren Teitelman in his PhD thesis in 1966.
Best Answer
It's an event listener as defined in the servlet standard. Basically, it's a way to execute code when the servlet container has started the web app.
Spring's
ContextLoaderListener
uses this mechanism to create theWebApplicationContext
, which involves reading and parsing all bean configuration XML files, as well as (depending on the configuration) instantiating the singleton beans.