Very nice Spring-Intro! Worth to become part of the official documentation.
"To start off with my new (Enterprise) Java Development Blog here on StSMedia.net I would like to gradually develop a sample application which demonstrates various aspects of the Spring framework and some of its related projects and products."
JAutodoc is an Eclipse Plugin for automatic adding Javadoc and file headers to your source code. It optionally generates initial comments from element name. Starting with Release 1.3 of JAutodoc it is possible to define Velocity templates for Javadoc and file headers.
While Subversion will do a fine job of storing all of the files you want revisioned, it can do quite a bit more. For example, it could send an eMail to a list of users every time a commit is made, to help ensure that at least one more set of eyeballs looks at critical bits of code before they get deployed into production environments. It can allow some users (but not others) to alter some properties (but not others). It can automatically attempt a recompile of code on a particular branch whenever commits are made, inform users as to the outcome of that compile, and even push those changes to a test machine for live experimentation. Subversion's triggers, or hook scripts, can be as simple or as complex as you desire.
Maven DocCheck Plugin is a report-type plugin for Apache Maven. It will create and register a report on missing and corrupt javadoc comments using the Sun Doc Check Doclet.
Generates documentation for the Java code in the project using the Doc Check Doclet. The default settings will suit many projects, and simply entering maven doccheck will create the standard documentation.
The topic of technical publishing is relatively new to the world of Eclipse. One can make the argument that technical publishing is just another collaborative development process involving several people with different backgrounds and skills. This article will show that the Eclipse platform is a viable platform for technical publishing by discussing how to write documents such as an article or a book within Eclipse. In fact, this article was written using Eclipse.
Stylebase for Eclipse is an open source tooling environment for software architects and designers. Stylebase is a reuse repository for architectural models and design patterns and it assists in applying quality-driven architecture design into software engineering. The tools are extensions to Eclipse, the most widely-used open source integrated development environment. We believe that Stylebase for Eclipse helps to improve the quality of software products and also increases reuse and information sharing in local and distributed development teams.
quick references that feature the most commonly forgotten things on a specific topic. You can print them out and hang them on your wall, or just keep them handy in your bookmarks for quick reference.
Natural Docs is an open-source, extensible, multi-language documentation generator. You document your code in a natural syntax that reads like plain English. Natural Docs then scans your code and builds high-quality HTML documentation from it.
The long term goal of the DITA Open Toolkit is to provide a high quality implementation for production level output of DITA XML content, built in a professionally-managed project environment by vetted contributors, and tested thoroughly for each Release C