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Showing posts from October, 2025

How does ABAP integrate with SAP Fiori and SAP UI5?

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ABAP plays a crucial role behind every SAP Fiori and SAP UI5 app — it’s basically the backbone that connects the front-end with the SAP system. While Fiori and UI5 handle how the app looks and feels, ABAP handles the logic, data processing, and backend services through OData. In simple terms, Fiori/UI5 is what users see, and ABAP is what makes everything work behind the scenes. When I joined Anubhav Trainings to understand this integration , things finally clicked for me. The trainer, Anubhav Oberoy, explained how ABAP developers can expose data using CDS views, OData services, and RAP models — and how those connect seamlessly to Fiori apps. The hands-on sessions helped me move from traditional ABAP coding to modern, UI-driven development. It’s amazing to see how ABAP still stays relevant in the cloud era by powering modern SAP Fiori apps built on SAP BTP.

Can a fresher still get a job by learning ABAP in 2025?

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 Absolutely, SAP BTP is worth learning in 2025. With businesses moving rapidly toward cloud and intelligent enterprise solutions, BTP is at the center of SAP’s innovation. It allows developers to build, integrate, and extend applications in the cloud while connecting with SAP HANA, Fiori, and other services seamlessly. Learning BTP isn’t just about coding; it’s about understanding how modern SAP solutions work together. I attended Anubhav Trainings to get hands-on with BTP, and it completely changed my perspective.  The trainer, Anubhav Oberoy, explained concepts like Cloud Foundry, CAP, and Fiori integration in a way that made sense, even for complex scenarios. The practical exercises showed how to build real applications, integrate them with SAP services, and deploy them in the cloud. For anyone wanting to stay relevant in SAP development, learning BTP in 2025 is not just useful — it’s almost essential.

What is the difference between classical ABAP and ABAP on HANA?

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 The main difference between classical ABAP and ABAP on HANA is how they handle data and performance. Classical ABAP was designed for traditional databases, where most processing happened at the application layer. But with ABAP on HANA, things changed — now the power of the in-memory HANA database allows processing directly at the database level, making applications much faster and more efficient. When I first started learning ABAP on HANA, I realized it wasn’t just about syntax changes — it was a complete shift in mindset.  At Anubhav Trainings, I got to see how CDS Views, AMDP, and new performance optimization techniques bring real improvements in project scenarios. Anubhav Oberoy’s explanations made it easy to understand how to write code that truly leverages HANA’s speed. That experience helped me upgrade my skills from traditional ABAP to modern, performance-driven ABAP on HANA — and it was absolutely worth it.

How is ABAP evolving with SAP S/4HANA?

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 ABAP has come a long way with SAP S/4HANA — it’s no longer just the classic backend coding language we knew. With the introduction of ABAP on HANA and ABAP RESTful Application Programming Model (RAP) , it’s now built for cloud, speed, and modern app development. Developers can create clean, efficient, and scalable applications that integrate seamlessly with SAP Fiori and SAP BTP services. When I started exploring this shift, I realized how different the new ABAP environment is — more about clean core, CDS views, and service-based architecture. I joined Anubhav Trainings to understand it properly, and that experience completely changed my perspective. Anubhav Oberoy explained real project use cases and how ABAP developers can stay relevant in the S/4HANA era. The hands-on approach helped me move from traditional coding to modern ABAP practices with confidence. It truly bridges old SAP with the future-ready cloud world.

Is ABAP still relevant in 2025?

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Yes, ABAP is still very relevant in 2025 — just in a more modern form. SAP is moving towards cloud and clean-core development, but ABAP remains the backbone for customizing and extending SAP systems. What’s changing is how ABAP is used — now it’s all about ABAP on Cloud, RAP (Restful ABAP Programming), and integration with SAP BTP services. When I first heard people say “ABAP is outdated,” I believed it — until I joined Anubhav Trainings. The sessions with Anubhav Oberoy completely changed my view. He showed how ABAP has evolved with RAP, CAP, and Steampunk, and how developers can build cloud-ready extensions using the same ABAP skills but in a smarter way. After working on hands-on exercises and seeing how ABAP connects with Fiori and BTP, I realized it’s not dying — it’s transforming. Learning modern ABAP actually helped me stay relevant and confident in the new SAP world.