Anthony - Not necessarily. Beehive has several parts; and yes, PageFlow is the web framework of Beehive, and it is built on top of Struts. You forgot to mention another part of Beehive, namely, the Controls framework. This framework provides good encapsulation to complex JavaEE technologies, such as JDBC, JMS, and web services, as a component model. For example, the Web Service Control provides a java proxy class to a web service based on its WSDL. If you are on the Weblogic platform, it provides additional benefit since it integrates well with WLS, and it gives you feature coverage in areas such as conversational web service, transactions, EJB Timer, management console, etc. There are good support from the IDE as an eclipse plug-in. I was involved in implementing some of the technologies at one time and could give you more detail if you are interested.
Regards, Xibin Zeng On Thu, Jun 5, 2008 at 4:45 PM, Antony Stubbs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Seriously - forget about Beehive - it's built on Struts and struts is crap. > > Use Wicket. > > > Eirik Rude-3 wrote: > > > > We are in the process of choosing a new framework to move all of our > > development to. One of the frameworks being considered is Beehive since > > we are on Weblogic servers. Can you tell us if this framework is still > > active, and if this is something we should be considering. > > > > Thank you, > > Eirik Rude > > Senior Internationalization Architect > > Vurv Technology > > > > > > > ----- > ___________________________ > > http://stubbisms.wordpress.com http://stubbisms.wordpress.com > -- > View this message in context: > http://www.nabble.com/Is-Beehive-still-an-active-project--tp16907363p17681890.html > Sent from the Beehive - Dev mailing list archive at Nabble.com. > >
