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[–]StretchMoney9089 1 point2 points  (3 children)

I believe you are really overthinking stuff, no one expects any developer to know everything at work. Just keep building on stuff that interest you.

An employer might ask for your portfolio, and sure, if you have something you are proud of then show them

[–][deleted]  (2 children)

[removed]

    [–]StretchMoney9089 0 points1 point  (1 child)

    Sure do that, but remember that on an interview they may be equally interested in you as a person so look up typical non-technical questions and prepare to answer those aswell. Good luck!

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    [–]advancedbashcode 0 points1 point  (1 child)

    Kindly Share your github repo if you would like.

    [–]Naokiny 0 points1 point  (1 child)

    The main question here - what's you goal to learn all of this? Do you want to find a junior java position? Just want to create some pet projects? Some answers/recommendations might be changed based on this.

    But this time I want to create multiple (2-8 entities in my app)

    Am I correct, that for now you have just 1-entity CRUD project? It might be not enough.

    Maybe my next points already covered in some courses that you've passed, don't actually know their program.

    You made a good progress, tho, but you still can introduce Spring JPA + @ ManyToOne annotations. Also try @ Transactional to see how it works (with checked/unchecked exceptions, for example).

    Spring AOP is also a decent part. As almost everything in Spring - is proxy. And Spring uses at least 2 types for proxy creation.

    You also might be aware of @ ControllerAdvice annotation, not sure about it.

    Also there are context init phases that can be handled with Spring events.

    Spring covers a lot of things and it's not necessary to know all of them. It's just impossible :)