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Review 1
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Average rating 5.0
It's the advance team. I have Toby's Spring book at my office and at home. It's been 14 years since the book came out, but it's still a great help in understanding the working principles of Spring and the abstractions it provides. I started watching it as soon as the lecture was released, but I was so obsessed that I kept clicking on the next lecture button and it was time to go to bed. There's a process of presenting problems in a situation where functional requirements are satisfied through example code, and transforming it into changeable code by applying design patterns and design principles. It was easy to understand and I was able to take the class with great immersion. I recommend that you look up the keywords that are thrown out here and there instead of just skipping them. Although Spring has been developing for over 20 years, I can feel the greatness of object-oriented design in that its underlying technology is still solid. In the book and in this lecture, Toby seems to be teaching us how to catch fish. I love Toby.
I am also very impressed by the fact that the foundation that Spring has maintained without change and the principles reflected in it have remained unchanged for quite some time. Thank you for your first review.
How is the status of the advance team? ㅎㅎ I'm also curious about the review after completing the course!
Ah! I finished the course right after writing the course review, so I'm leaving a completion review. I felt that you prepared a lot throughout the course to make it smooth. It was fun to think about how you would solve it by presenting a problem that wasn't forced and solving it step by step from the bottom up. Wouldn't you do it like this? While thinking about this, I checked if Toby's thoughts and the direction I wanted to solve it overlapped(?). I usually think that I should be careful about codes that I don't know or parts that become objects of envy for designs. Thanks to Toby's knowledge transfer, I think I'm building up the basis for being able to receive information with discrimination in the sea of information. It was fun and informative. Thank you. I love you. P.S. I wanted to go to Infcon this year, but ㅜㅜ I failed Infcon. It's a regret of a lifetime.