Thanks again for the input. I'll be diving deep this weekend and will hopefully come out the other end with a working subset. Unfortunately, this is relegated to side-project time for me, as my employer expects Java code rather than all of these parens. I will post updates here as the project comes along.
Cheers, Adam Foltzer On Thu, Feb 18, 2010 at 9:10 AM, Jukka Zitting <[email protected]>wrote: > Hi, > > On Thu, Feb 18, 2010 at 2:02 AM, Adam Foltzer <[email protected]> wrote: > > Since I've only ever submitted one patch to an ASF project, I'll go ahead > > and use GitHub for now. I've been meaning to properly learn Git anyway, > so > > that'll be good motivation. Once the shape comes together, it could > always > > be moved. > > Sounds good. > > > As for the actual artifact, the clojure-contrib-sql API seems to be a > good > > reference: http://richhickey.github.com/clojure-contrib/sql-api.html > > Agreed. > > > Interacting with JCR is more involved than using a JDBC connection, of > > course, but I think a lot of the same patterns could be used to access > basic > > functionality. > > Here's a quick draft of what potential client code could look like: > > (defn print-tree [node] > (println (node :path)) > (doseq [child (child-nodes node)] > (print-tree child))) > > (with-repository "http://localhost:8080/" > (with-session "default" "admin" "admin" > (print-tree (root-node session))) > > > Of course, other nice "big-leap" ideas are very welcome. > > It would be interesting to do stuff like generic tree traversal > methods. For example the above code could then be implemented like > this: > > (with-repository "http://localhost:8080/" > (with-session "default" "admin" "admin" > (traverse-tree #(println (%1 :path))))) > > For other ideas, see the cool Scala stuff that Michael Dürig has been > working on: > http://dev.day.com/content/ddc/blog.html?blog=author&author=Michael+Duerig > > BR, > > Jukka Zitting >
