This initial part of the reference documentation covers all of those technologies that are absolutely integral to the Spring Framework.
Foremost amongst these is the Spring Framework's Inversion of Control (IoC) container. A thorough treatment of the Spring Framework's IoC container is closely followed by comprehensive coverage of Spring's Aspect-Oriented Programming (AOP) technologies. The Spring Framework has its own AOP framework, which is conceptually easy to understand, and which successfully addresses the 80% sweet spot of AOP requirements in enterprise programming.
The core functionality also includes an expression language for lightweight scripting and a ui-agnostic validation framework.
Finally, the adoption of the test-driven-development (TDD) approach to software development is certainly advocated by the Spring team, and so coverage of Spring's support for integration testing is covered (alongside best practices for unit testing). The Spring team have found that the correct use of IoC certainly does make both unit and integration testing easier (in that the presence of properties and appropriate constructors on classes makes them easier to wire together on a test without having to set up service locator registries and suchlike)... the chapter dedicated solely to testing will hopefully convince you of this as well.
- Chapter 5, The IoC container
- Chapter 6, The IObjectWrapper and Type conversion
- Chapter 7, Resources
- Chapter 8, Threading and Concurrency Support
- Chapter 9, Object Pooling
- Chapter 11, Expression Evaluation
- Chapter 10, Spring.NET miscellanea
- Chapter 12, Validation Framework
- Chapter 13, Aspect Oriented Programming with Spring.NET
- Chapter 14, Aspect Library
- Chapter 15, Common Logging
- Chapter 16, Testing