I saw that syntax on a blog a few days ago, but I did not try it with
version 7.6.
The db4o team has been really dedicated to C# and LINQ in the past few
versions, to I would image the library will become more friendly to
languageas like Scala.
On Oct 6, 12:08 am, Bjarte S. Karlsen
[EMAIL
efleming969 wrote:
I saw that syntax on a blog a few days ago, but I did not try it with
version 7.6.
The db4o team has been really dedicated to C# and LINQ in the past few
versions, to I would image the library will become more friendly to
languageas like Scala.
Unfortunately, DB4O's
David, I've browsed your past discussions on this topic and didn't
quite get this point from them. So, according to their interpretation
of the GPL, I cannot develop an application using Lift+Db4o, as a
consultant, for my customer's internal use?
I guess my existing app using wicket+db4o is
On Mon, Oct 6, 2008 at 7:53 AM, David Pollak [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Unfortunately, DB4O's choice of license and business model drives them away
from JVM-land and toward CLR-land.
I've had pretty extensive chats with the DB4O people and would really like
to do something with them related
@bjarte and @charles
Sure, I've been learning Scala for a few months now and was trying to
create a wicket application with db4o and kept running into problems
that I did not know how to solve in Scala. Since Lift is witten in
Scala, I thought my learning curve could be about the same, so here
On Sun, Oct 5, 2008 at 8:27 AM, efleming969 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
@bjarte and @charles
Sure, I've been learning Scala for a few months now and was trying to
create a wicket application with db4o and kept running into problems
that I did not know how to solve in Scala. Since Lift is
efleming969:
I'm trying to convert a scala + wicket + db4o application to Lift +
db4o. I'm using a standard ServletContextListener to shutdown my
database file.
This sounds really cool. Are you able to share this when you are done? Or blog
a tutorial about it?
--
With kind regards / Med