I finally understood why companies love Spring Boot. At first it looked like "just another Java framework". After actually building a backend with it - it felt more like an ecosystem than a framework. You don't write configuration → Spring figures it out You don't manually manage objects → Spring injects them You don't worry about server setup → It runs instantly Instead of fighting the setup, I could focus on logic. That's when it clicked: Spring Boot isn't popular because it's easy... It's popular because it lets developers think about problems, not plumbing. Now backend architecture (Controller → Service → Repository) finally makes real sense to me. Next step: making it secure and production-ready #SpringBoot #Java
Why Spring Boot is more than just a Java framework
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🚀 Mastering Spring Boot – Step by Step (Day 3) Most developers write code like this 👇 new PaymentService() Looks normal… right? But this is exactly what makes your code: ❌ Hard to test ❌ Tightly coupled ❌ Difficult to scale 💡 That’s where Dependency Injection comes in 👉 You don’t create objects 👉 Spring creates & injects them for you If you truly understand this concept, Spring Boot will start making actual sense 🚀 📌 I’ve explained everything visually in this carousel: • Problem without DI • Types of Injection • @Autowired, @Qualifier, @Primary • How Spring resolves dependencies 👉 Swipe through 👇 📌 About this series: Follow from Day 0 → Day X and you’ll build a strong backend foundation step by step 🔥 Next → Spring Boot vs Spring Framework #spring #springboot #java #backend #learninginpublic
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🚀 Getting Started with Spring Boot Today marks my first step into Spring Boot, one of the most powerful tools for building modern backend applications. 💡 What stood out to me: Without Spring Boot → Setting up Java projects can be complex and time-consuming ❌ With Spring Boot → Backend development becomes faster, cleaner, and more efficient ✅ 🧠 What I explored: ✔️ What Spring Boot is ✔️ Why developers prefer it ✔️ Where it’s used in real-world applications 🌍 Real-world usage: • REST APIs • Backend systems • Microservices architecture 💻 Keeping consistency with DSA: • Finding sum of even numbers • Finding the largest number ⌨️ Plus, continued my daily typing practice to improve speed and accuracy. ✨ Small consistent steps are helping me build confidence in backend development. 🧠 Quick Check: Spring Boot is mainly used for 👉 Backend APIs #SpringBoot #Java #BackendDevelopment #Microservices #DSA #LearningInPublic #DeveloperJourney
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I used to think Spring Boot just runs and handles everything Swipe to see what is actually happening inside If your answer to how Spring Boot works is it just runs and handles requests you are probably missing what actually matters Most people can build with Spring Boot very few understand what happens under the hood While going deeper, a few things started making more sense • How the application starts and builds the context • What SpringApplication triggers behind the scenes • How beans are created and managed step by step • Why proxies exist and where they actually matter • How self invocation can silently break transactions The more I learn, the more I realise it is not just about writing code it is about understanding how the system behaves Still learning, but this changed how I approach backend development What part of Spring Boot internals do you find confusing #Java #SpringBoot #BackendDevelopment #SoftwareEngineering #SystemDesign
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🚀 Most developers misuse Spring Boot like this… At first, everything works fine. But as the project grows… things start breaking, slowing down, and becoming hard to maintain 😓 Here are some common mistakes I’ve seen 👇 ❌ Using @Autowired everywhere → Makes code hard to test and tightly coupled ✅ Use constructor injection instead → Cleaner, testable, and recommended approach. ❌ No proper layering (Controller → Service → Repository) → Leads to messy and unstructured code ✅ Follow clean architecture principles → Keeps your code scalable and maintainable. ❌ Ignoring exception handling → Results in poor API responses and debugging issues ✅ Implement global exception handling (@ControllerAdvice) → Consistent and meaningful error responses. ❌ Putting all logic in one class → “God class” problem 😬 ✅ Break into small, focused components → Better readability and maintainability. ❌ No proper configuration management → Hardcoded values everywhere ✅ Use application.yml / profiles → Clean and environment-specific configs. 💡 Pro Tip: Spring Boot is powerful, but without structure, it quickly turns into a monolith that’s hard to manage. 🔥 Have you seen any of these issues in real projects? Or what’s the biggest mistake you’ve faced in Spring Boot? #SpringBoot #Java #Microservices #BackendDevelopment
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I agree with you most Dev's use field injection which is not recommended . and also maintain a layered architecture which makes it less messier and easy to understand and if you wanna know more about java and springboot dm me i will send you a proper roadmap and fullstack project ideas using springboot
Senior Technical Lead @ HCLTech | Ex-Societe Generale | Java, Spring Boot| Microservices| System Designs
🚀 Most developers misuse Spring Boot like this… At first, everything works fine. But as the project grows… things start breaking, slowing down, and becoming hard to maintain 😓 Here are some common mistakes I’ve seen 👇 ❌ Using @Autowired everywhere → Makes code hard to test and tightly coupled ✅ Use constructor injection instead → Cleaner, testable, and recommended approach. ❌ No proper layering (Controller → Service → Repository) → Leads to messy and unstructured code ✅ Follow clean architecture principles → Keeps your code scalable and maintainable. ❌ Ignoring exception handling → Results in poor API responses and debugging issues ✅ Implement global exception handling (@ControllerAdvice) → Consistent and meaningful error responses. ❌ Putting all logic in one class → “God class” problem 😬 ✅ Break into small, focused components → Better readability and maintainability. ❌ No proper configuration management → Hardcoded values everywhere ✅ Use application.yml / profiles → Clean and environment-specific configs. 💡 Pro Tip: Spring Boot is powerful, but without structure, it quickly turns into a monolith that’s hard to manage. 🔥 Have you seen any of these issues in real projects? Or what’s the biggest mistake you’ve faced in Spring Boot? #SpringBoot #Java #Microservices #BackendDevelopment
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🚀 Most developers misuse Spring Boot like this… At first, everything works fine. But as the project grows… things start breaking, slowing down, and becoming hard to maintain 😓 Here are some common mistakes I’ve seen 👇 ❌ Using @Autowired everywhere → Makes code hard to test and tightly coupled ✅ Use constructor injection instead → Cleaner, testable, and recommended approach. ❌ No proper layering (Controller → Service → Repository) → Leads to messy and unstructured code ✅ Follow clean architecture principles → Keeps your code scalable and maintainable. ❌ Ignoring exception handling → Results in poor API responses and debugging issues ✅ Implement global exception handling (@ControllerAdvice) → Consistent and meaningful error responses. ❌ Putting all logic in one class → “God class” problem 😬 ✅ Break into small, focused components → Better readability and maintainability. ❌ No proper configuration management → Hardcoded values everywhere ✅ Use application.yml / profiles → Clean and environment-specific configs. 💡 Pro Tip: Spring Boot is powerful, but without structure, it quickly turns into a monolith that’s hard to manage. 🔥 Have you seen any of these issues in real projects? Or what’s the biggest mistake you’ve faced in Spring Boot? #SpringBoot #Java #Microservices #BackendDevelopment
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I used to think Spring Boot was just “another framework”… Until I actually started building with it. 🚀 Here are the core concepts of Spring Boot that completely changed how I see backend development: 👇 🔹 Auto-Configuration No more manual setup. Add a dependency → Spring Boot configures it for you. 🔹 Starter Dependencies Instead of adding 10 dependencies, you just use one: 👉 spring-boot-starter-web 🔹 Embedded Server No need for external Tomcat. Just run your app and it works. 🔹 Dependency Injection (DI) Spring manages objects for you → cleaner, loosely coupled code. 🔹 Inversion of Control (IoC) You don’t control object creation anymore — Spring does. 🔹 Spring MVC Architecture Controller → Service → Repository → Database (Simple, structured, scalable) 🔹 Spring Data JPA No need to write SQL for basic operations. Just use interfaces. 🔹 application.properties All configurations in one place → clean and manageable. 💡 What I realized: Spring Boot isn’t about writing less code… It’s about writing better, scalable code faster. What concept confused you the most when you started Spring Boot? 🤔 #Java #SpringBoot #BackendDevelopment #LearningInPublic #CodingJourney
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🚨 Most developers don’t realize they’re misusing Spring Boot… until it’s too late. At the start, everything feels smooth — fast APIs, clean code, quick delivery. But as the project grows, things begin to break, slow down, and become harder to maintain. I’ve noticed some common mistakes: ❌ Overusing @Autowired ❌ No proper layering (Controller → Service → Repository) ❌ Ignoring exception handling ❌ Creating “God classes” ❌ Hardcoding configurations The fix isn’t complicated — just disciplined: ✅ Constructor injection ✅ Clean architecture principles ✅ Global exception handling (@ControllerAdvice) ✅ Small, focused components ✅ Proper config management (application.yml & profiles) 💡 Spring Boot is powerful, but without structure, it quickly becomes a monolith that’s hard to scale. 📚 Huge thanks to Vipul Tyagi for consistently sharing such practical, real-world backend insights that help developers move beyond just writing code to actually building scalable and maintainable systems. Have you faced any of these issues in real projects? What’s the biggest mistake you’ve learned from? #SpringBoot #Java #BackendDevelopment #CleanCode #Microservices #SoftwareEngineering
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I recently read the InfoQ interview with the Spring team about Spring Framework 7 and Spring Boot 4. The biggest takeaway for me was this: Spring Boot 3 → Spring Boot 4 migration does not look like a simple dependency upgrade anymore. At first, it is easy to think about it as changing versions in pom.xml or build.gradle. But after reading the interview, I think this migration deserves a more careful look. There are a few topics that stand out: - modularized auto-configuration - built-in retry support - concurrency throttling - API versioning - Jackson 3 migration - null-safety improvements - migration tooling For small projects, this may still be manageable with a standard upgrade flow. But for backend systems with multiple services, integrations, shared libraries, and different client contracts, this becomes more than a version change. It is a good moment to ask some practical questions: Are we carrying dependencies we no longer need? Do we have a clear retry and timeout strategy? Can we automate repetitive changes instead of fixing the same problems service by service? My current view is that a Spring Boot 4 migration should probably start with a small PoC on a low-risk service. Not to over-engineer the process, but to understand the real impact before rolling it out widely. Spring Boot 4 seems like a good opportunity to clean up technical debt, review service boundaries, and improve the long-term maintainability of Java backend systems. #Java #SpringBoot #SpringFramework #Microservices #BackendDevelopment #SoftwareArchitecture
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🚀 Mastering Spring Boot – Step by Step (Day 5) Ever wondered… 👉 How Spring Boot works behind the scenes? 🤔 You just run the application… and everything magically works. But it’s NOT magic. 💡 Two important concepts: 👉 Auto Configuration 👉 Application Context ⚙️ Auto Configuration: Spring Boot automatically configures your app based on dependencies you add. 👉 Add Spring Web → You get Tomcat + MVC setup 👉 Add JPA → You get database config No manual setup needed 🚀 🧠 Application Context: This is the brain of Spring. 👉 It creates beans 👉 Manages them 👉 Injects dependencies Everything runs inside this container 💡 In simple terms: ApplicationContext = Factory + Manager 🏭 Auto Configuration = Smart setup ⚡ If you understand this… 👉 Spring Boot will stop feeling like “magic” 📌 About this series: Follow from Day 0 → Day X to build strong backend fundamentals step by step 🔥 Next → Maven Build Tool ⚙️ #spring #springboot #java #backend #learninginpublic
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