[ale] need your input on a project...

Matthew Brown matthew.brown at cordata.net
Fri Oct 18 15:59:40 EDT 2002


I looked close at the enhydra stuff.  First, they look like top-notch
developers.  BUT, they just went belly-up several months ago, and who
knows how well ObjectWeb will do at taking it up?

Best regards,
Matthew Brown, President
CorData, Inc.
O: (770) 795-0089
F: (404) 806-4855
E: matthew.brown at cordata.net


-----Original Message-----
From: Denny Chambers [mailto:dchambers at snapserver.com] 
To: ale at ale.org
Sent: Friday, October 18, 2002 3:51 PM
To: John Wells
Cc: ale at ale.org
Subject: Re: [ale] need your input on a project...


I am currently working on a rather large Servlet based application 
myself. When finished, it will be about 80-100 screen. We have been 
using Tomcat/Linux/JDK 1.4.1 with no problems so far. We also use a Web 
Application framework from Enhydra called Barracuda 
(barracuda.enhydra.org). We also use another tool called XMLC which 
compliments the Barracuda framework. Using Barracuda helps to give you a

clean separation of your UI logic from your back-end logic, something 
traditional CGI, Servlet and JSP/ASP approaches do not give you.. This 
really helps with maintainability.

HTH,

Denny

John Wells wrote:

>Guys,
>
>Just landed a rather large project involving converting a VB/Access/Sql
>Server app to an open source app.
>
>I'm most likely going the web approach because it makes very good sense
in
>this case.
>
>However, this is where I'm a bit indecisive.  I've used PHP quite a bit
in
>the past, and while it's very nice for smaller projects, I think it
tends
>to get messy as the project grows.  This particular app will have over
70
>screens and a lot of background processing, so I'm not convinced PHP is
>the way to go.  I also want to go OO, and although PHP has limited OO
>capabilities, it begins to feel a little Perl-y after a while
>(<flamebait>granted, PHP's OO syntax is much cleaner than
>Perl's</flamebait>).
>
>My next thought was: Gee...wish Python web programming was really
*There*.
> I looked at web programming in python briefly in the past, and it
seems
>as if there was either A. cgi scripting,  or B. a number of server
>pages-like projects, but cgi is not the way I'd like to go for
>efficiency's sake, and the server page projects looked to be a little
>beta-ish and not what I need for a project of this magnitude.  Then
>there's Zope, which seems mature, but folks have mentioned problems
with
>threading and the like.
>
>So, finally, my last option is Java/Jsp/Servlets.  I have a lot of
>experience in this area, so coding wouldn't be a problem.  However,
iirc
>Tomcat is not really intended for production, so I'm not sure what sort
of
>servlet/jsp containers are available (and mature) as open source.
>
>Ultimately, I need something clean and fast, with a fairly good support
>community.
>
>Any thoughts?
>
>Thanks for your input.  It will be greatly appreciated.
>
>John
>
>
>
>---
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>  
>


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