Vauban Vincent
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Vincent Vauban is a Fullstack software developer with over 15 years of experience in Java, Spring, JavaScript, React, and Angular. As a vExpert and Udemy instructor, he brings his expertise to a variety of industries, including banking, insurance, retail, and the public sector.Java 26 + Spring Boot 4: From Certification Skills to Production-Ready Apps
Most Spring developers don’t fail in production because they forgot an annotation. They fail because the “non-feature” parts of the system were treated as optional: observability that comes too late, security added at the end, data access built under deadline pressure, APIs that can’t evolve without breaking clients, tests that don’t protect upgrades.
This article argues that Spring certification skills ( whether you take the exam or not ) offer a surprisingly effective antidote. The certification domains (Core, Data, MVC, Testing, Security, Spring Boot/Actuator) form a practical learning map: a structured way to cover what you must know to build services that survive real traffic, real incidents, and real change. Instead of learning Spring by random experimentation, you build a foundation that helps you recognize the right feature “on the shelf” and avoid reinventing the wheel.
From there, you add a lightweight “delta” layer: a focused micro-learning pass on what’s new. Spring Boot 4 brings modularization, stronger null-safety signals with JSpecify, built-in API versioning, HTTP Service Clients, and modern observability wiring. Java 26 raises the platform bar with targeted performance and networking improvements, plus evolving concurrency and runtime capabilities that matter in service-to-service systems.
If you’ve ever felt uncertain when requirements are fuzzy and the solution space is wide, the approach here is simple: use the map, then update it. The result is not just exam readiness: it’s the confidence to deliver production-ready Spring Boot microservices with a sharper toolbox and a clearer mental model.