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Matthew Hawkins
Software Developer
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Building a Todo App with MVC Pattern in webforJ

· 9 min de lectura
Matthew Hawkins
Software Developer

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Remember learning about Model-View-Controller (MVC) in university? For most, at least from what I hear when speaking to others, they had to actually create an app following this design paradigm, which greatly helps any future use of this pattern in the "real world."

For me, that class was right in the middle of COVID. Our instructor was a nice enough guy, but between the Zoom fatigue and lack of experience (I'm fairly sure it was his first or second term teaching), not only did we not end up actually building anything, but we spent time doing theoretical explorations of the various design patterns out there, with MVC only receiving a few days of review.

All this to say that when I started working with webforJ, I saw it as the perfect opportunity to finally get hands-on with MVC—not just to understand the pattern properly this time, but also to learn how webforJ fits into this paradigm. Building a stereotypical todo app seemed like the ideal way to explore both.

My First Foray into Full-Stack with webforJ

· 8 min de lectura
Matthew Hawkins
Software Developer

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As I went through my computer science education at Oregon State, I realized pretty quickly that I enjoyed the UI side of things. Messing around with CSS (yes, even trying to center a div) and making pages that looked nice appealed to me way more than databases and business logic.

Somehow, I ended up working at a company that primarily used Java. Lucky for me, the project I ended up on was a Java web framework - back in my comfort zone!

I've been able to keep myself pretty much in UI land since then, in my comfort zone and happy to let my colleagues deal with all that back end stuff.

Recently our framework, webforJ, released Spring integration, and with that, my blissful isolation in UI land came to an end. As my first foray into full-stack development, I was asked to build a (very, very simple) CRUD application using Spring and webforJ both so I could learn more about the back end, and also showcase webforJ and Spring together in one project.

TLDR: It went well.