Andreas,

I don't get it. You can use JDO and Hibernate with SQL. Given that
jiql has a Hibernate config file, I guess using Hibernate with jiql
would be so easy.

What does GWT and JSP have to do with SQL anyway?

Cheers,
Guillermo.

On 30 mar, 03:51, Andreas Borglin <andreas.borg...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi again.
>
> I had a look at jiql.
> "jiql is a JDBC wrapper for accessing Google DataStore on Google App
> Engine for JAVA.
> jiql supports the use of standard SQL as a method for accessing
> the DataStore"
>
> Even if I had seen jiql earlier I wouldn't have considered it anyway
> because,
>
> 1. I want the API to make perfect sense for working with the
> datastore. "Standard SQL" doesn't meet this requirement.
> 2. I use GWT. Not JSP or any other technology to dynamically generate
> pages on server side.
>
> On Mar 29, 8:52 pm, Guillermo Schwarz <guillermo.schw...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> > One question: Why didn't you consider jiql?
>
> > On Mon, Mar 29, 2010 at 1:04 PM, Blake <blakecaldw...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > +1
>
> > > On Mar 29, 4:03 am, Andreas Borglin <andreas.borg...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > > Hi all.
>
> > > > I recently decided to migrate away from JDO to one of the third party
> > > > datastore frameworks. At first I had only heard about objectify, but
> > > > after some further digging I  found out about 5 other frameworks as
> > > > well (Twig, SimpleDS, siena, slim3, cloud2db).
>
> > > > I was only interested in simple wrapper frameworks that acted as a
> > > > convenience layer above the AppEngine low-level API. I _want_ the
> > > > framework to expose the true nature of the datastore, but at the same
> > > > time relieve the developer of the tedious tasks that's involved when
> > > > working with the low-level API directly. It is much easier to work
> > > > with the AppEngine datastore when its concepts, features, constraints
> > > > and limitations are exposed directly. You can read more about the
> > > > reasons for this in the article.
>
> > > > This left me with objectify, Twig and SimpleDS. (siena and cloud2db
> > > > are multi-platform and slim3 is more than just a datastore framework)
>
> > > > I spent some time researching these when I got the idea to write an
> > > > article about them. I contacted the authors for each framework and
> > > > asked if they would be interested in participating. Passionate as they
> > > > are, they agreed :-). Thanks to Jeff Schnitzer (objectify), John
> > > > Patterson (Twig) and Ignacio Coloma (SimpleDS) for this.
>
> > > > The goal is to publish two articles; one interview with the authors,
> > > > and one where I solve some typical scenario with each framework.
> > > > The interview article has now been published and can be found athttp://
> > > borglin.net/gwt-project/?page_id=604.
> > > > The code example article will be posted sometime in the upcoming two
> > > > weeks.
>
> > > --
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>
> > --
> > Saludos cordiales,
>
> > Guillermo Schwarz
> > Sun Certified Enterprise Architect

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