As we hear often, there is no one solution which fits all situations.
Given the great features of Stripes, where do you think Stripes would not fit on a J2EE web application?
Is there some place where you think Wicket or JSF or Spring MVC or Struts or Tapestry might have an edge over stripes?
Also, to get rails/grails like productivity, What other frameworks should I use in combination with Stripes to get it? Or is this impossible in Java?
Originally posted by M Rama:
Gregg,
Thanks for that response. What do you use in your middle tier and data tier along with Stripes? Do you have a single toolset which you prefer on those arenas as well?
Originally posted by M Rama:
Frederic,
As we hear often, there is no one solution which fits all situations. Given the great features of Stripes, where do you think Stripes would not fit on a J2EE web application? Lets assume that all developers are ok with learning a new technology.
Is there some place where you think Wicket or JSF or Spring MVC or Struts or Tapestry might have an edge over stripes?
Also, to get rails/grails like productivity, What other frameworks should I use in combination with Stripes to get it? Or is this impossible in Java?
Frederic Daoud
Author, Stripes...and Java Web Development is Fun Again
Stripes book
Originally posted by Will Hartung:
My opinion is basically that Component Frameworks are an intermediate step ...
Originally posted by Frederic Daoud:
Component-based frameworks are more complicated because they have to bridge the gap between the concept of components and the stateless request-response nature of the HTTP protocol.
Originally posted by Will Hartung:
the component frameworks will go the wayside as the browsers take over their role.
M Rama wrote:What do you use in your middle tier and data tier along with Stripes? Do you have a single toolset which you prefer on those arenas as well?
Consider Paul's rocket mass heater. |