・
Reviews 8
・
Average rating 5.0
I don't usually write lecture reviews like this, but this is really the best lecture. I've been following the roadmap from the introductory part, and the content of the lectures themselves is good, but I think the lecture roadmap itself is the best. In the introductory-basic part, you learn the core of the Spring framework and conceptual content related to object-oriented and design patterns, and in MVC, you learn about the web-related Spring framework, and in JPA, you learn about Spring and DB, and in each of the two parts and the utilization part, you learn practical or implementation-related content. The lecture itself feels like a well-organized framework with good modularization. And the flow of the lectures themselves is like following the framework or developing without Spring and then applying Spring, and it appeals to the necessity of the framework and increases understanding by stacking these processes like layers, so it's easy to follow and I think you learn a lot. This is a lecture I really want to recommend to anyone. Thank you.
Looking at Js Smz's course review, I remember when I first prepared the course. In fact, when I first prepared the course, I worried a lot about what kind of course to make. It's easy to make a course that simply explains the functions, creates a bulletin board, and so on, but I thought it would be difficult to become a developer with internal skills in the field through such courses. (Of course, such courses are also necessary.) Defining the problem is always important, and I thought that even if it's a little difficult, understanding the basic principles of why this technology came out and why it's needed would increase problem-solving skills and build internal skills as a developer. So when I was thinking about the course curriculum, I focused on understanding why this function itself should be used rather than simply the function, and rather than explaining the functions broadly, I focused on explaining the functions that are used as much as possible in the field. When I interviewed many developers, when I asked them, "Why do you use Spring? Why do you use the MVC pattern? Why did you use this technology at that time?", many developers simply answered, "Because people around me use it a lot. It's famous." Through my lectures, I wanted to explain not just the functions, but also the fundamental principles of why this technology is used. So I wanted to create a lecture that would help you become a truly capable developer with solid foundation in the field.




