Quick look at the latest SpringSource STS and Roo

Christian Dupuis from SpringSource shows some of the new features on the SpringIde Blog

I used Spring STS for a few months before starting at Lab49, and found it to be a good distribution over the standard Eclipse build. It has lots of extra productivity features for Spring based development some of which are not available by downloading Spring plugins and adding them to a normal distribution.
The things I like best are:

  • The edit, navigation and search systems now support the spring annotations. So now you can navigate and search for beans declared via annotations.
  • Ability to include new XML domains in the spring configuration from a popup list.
  • The enhanced XML editing support now has inline error checking.
  • This XML editor also supports completion and checking of class and bean names.
  • Roo shell looks interesting too.

Roo and Roo Shell
The Roo system looks great. Its a system to generate and support a JEE system. The roo shell can be used to configure JEE components. You can have a basic website up in seconds. Like Groovy and Grails you get spring standards built in, and your not dependent on the Roo system once your finished.

I am going to take a proper look at it at some point.

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5 reasons to upgrade Spring from 2.0 to 2.5

The 2nd anniversary of the announcement that Spring 2.5 was available is just around the corner. There are many reasons to upgrade the SpringFramework from 2.0 to 2.5. Spring 2.5 is designed as a drop-in replacement for 2.0 so there are no valid technical arguments for not upgrading.

Release Announcement: 19/11/2007

I don’t want to review all the improvements that were made, but thought it would be interesting to pick a favorite feature and explain why for me its the best feature. Perhaps some of the few remaining projects out there will move up and start taking advantage of this fantastic framework. After all, with the release notice for 3.0 RC1 back in September soon there will be reasons to upgrade again!

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