Speaker

Álvaro Sánchez-Mariscal Arnaiz
Oracle

Álvaro is a passionate developer and agile enthusiast with over 23 years of experience. He is now a Principal Member of Technical Staff at Oracle Labs, where he is a Micronaut committer, helping to maintain and evolve the open-source framework.

Before that, he was a Staff Engineer at VMWare, where he led the creation of new products to build, package, verify and publish software solutions with confidence in the VMware Marketplace. Previously, he spent some years working in different industries like gambling games (Odobo) and fintech (4Finance). Prior to that, he created his own company, Salenda, in 2005, a software factory and Atlassian Solution Partner headquartered in Madrid, Spain. Adaptavist acquired Salenda in 2019. Previously, he worked at companies like IBM BCS, Sun Microsystems or BEA Systems, where he was recognised as BEA Technical Director, an MVP awards program. He was also one of the initial founders and member of the Board of Directors of javaHispano in 2002, the world's largest Spanish-speaking Java User Group.

Álvaro has spoken in 20 different countries at conferences like Devoxx BE/FR/MA, several Voxxed Days, GeeCON, JavaLand, JavaZone, jPrime, Codemotion and Commit Conf, among others. In his spare time, as well as coding and experimenting with new technologies, he likes to spend time with his wife and children, support CD Leganés football team, and play paddle tennis.

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Java annotation processing magic for muggles
Conference (ADVANCED level)
Room C

Annotations, introduced in Java 5 two decades ago, have revolutionised how we develop Java applications. Traditional frameworks like Spring and Hibernate rely on runtime annotation processing using reflection to perform tasks such as dependency injection or implement persistence operations.

Alternatively, the Java Annotation Processing API, introduced in Java 6 in 2006, allows developers to hook into the compilation phase to process sources and react to annotations present on them. This was leveraged by libraries like Lombok and Dagger, and frameworks such as Micronaut, although their way of processing annotations varies.

In this session, Micronaut Framework committer Álvaro Sánchez-Mariscal will explain with examples the different techniques that can be used for both runtime and compile-time processing of annotations, revealing the magic behind popular open-source projects

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