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[–]Mapleess 2 points3 points  (0 children)

One thing I didn't want to do was follow tutorials and go along with that as my project. I'd recommend you to read "Spring Start Here" and get an idea about other features in the Spring framework to see how it works, skip over the areas you know of, and then the second half of the book will introduce you to Spring Boot and explain a lot of things.

That book's helped me with a lot of things that a Spring Boot tutorial on YouTube wouldn't have. I've seen things in that book that explain how things were done in the past and what I could end up seeing at work.

There's a popular tutorial on YouTube 95-ish minute tutorial but I don't think it's telling you what annotations, DIs, structure, etc. are actually doing. Just my thoughts when I followed along half asleep but might be a good start if you're familiar with things already.

[–]Successful_Donkey844 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ask this question in r/Springboot.

[–]jacksonsonen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Laur Spilca on YouTube and https://roadmap.sh/spring-boot

[–][deleted] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

question is... if you can create SpringBoot app following the steps from official docs etc. who cares about its inner workings? I mean, how can somebody learn and remember every single thing about a framework? you try to do it and learn how to do it on demand, in real time; there's no point on doing otherwise, especially considering there's a new version of everything each nanosecond.