I know Amazon is Java heavy. Wondering if they are using Spring or someother internal framework.
I am also curious with how widespread or adoption of Spring (Boot) at major Technology companies. It was my understanding that most Tech companies would build out their own frameworks/tools, to gain edge over competition. How widespread/adopted is Spring Boot @ FAANG, Uber, Airbnb, etc. other Unicorns 🦄
Yes, expect a lot of spring. It sucks because spring is terrible. Boot is a lot better, but it still sux.
That sucks. In application teams, do they have seperate backend spring devs and front end react devs? Or the norm is full stack devs working on both spring and react?
There’s usually a division of labor between front end and backend but some times the lines blur. For example we have a console that’s a mixture of spring And angular.
There's a lot of spring at Amazon because it used to be part of the default template for setting up a new service. I wouldn't say that means that teams know how to use it or use it properly because I definitely see a lot of people not. Guice is around a lot since it's the new default DI framework on the template. People using Lambda that care about boot times use Dagger2
Interesting. Just wondering how dagger and guice replace spring boot starters? Imagine you have your message queue/service discovery/rpc/etc and these beans need to be proper initialized and injected into a context. How it works?
Spring boot isn't really used. Just the regular spring
I've started noticing the transition of spring to guice....I prefer guice
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We use dagger for DI on my team. And we have internal frameworks for services so we don’t use spring