Yes, I am interested. But I suggest you create a Wiki page and add your example as a zip file to this page. Instead of having links to your own CVS.
I am interested because I walked the same road as you did. Just like you, I found out that I could not do some things with the JXForms framework. You created your own form-framework solution. I am looking into Woody which has a lot of hooks to insert your own solution. But this takes a lot of time to invest. So when you have to deliver something before the end of the month... Anyway, I am interested in your solution. BTW: The Hibernate guys are now aware of the license problem, and seem to be willing to offer their api under a less restrictive license. Hugo > -----Original Message----- > From: Jeremy Quinn [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Thursday, August 14, 2003 6:19 PM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Flow + Hibernate sample offer > > > Dear All, > > I have just been given permission by my client inIVA.org to open source > the application I have been writing for them for editing their SQL > dataset (their Archive on http://www.iniva.org/archive). > > My hope is that this could constitute a sample of working with > FlowScript + JX + Hibernate. It would not be otherwise useful to > anyone, because it all depends on inIVA's copious data (which would > obviously not be supplied). > > I would either supply the App as a .gzip download, or maybe from the > private CVS I use. > > I imagine I would put a page on the wiki to alert people of the > existence of the sample, with a link to the download. > > So, some questions .... > > what do you think, is this a good idea? > should/can I add the Apache license to it? > does it matter that I used my own form-framework, not Woody, JXForm > etc.? > would anyone care to peer-review it (to check I have used good > practises) before release? > should I publish it with a test dataset, so the jUnit tests > work (if > so, how)? > are there any other issues I have not thought of? > > > Thanks for your feedback > > regards Jeremy > >
