Cool series! -MW-
On 4/15/05, Kito D. Mann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > In the Trenches is a new JSF Central series about real world projects that > use JavaServer Faces. The latest article looks at how Prisma, an Austrian > credit insurance cmmpany, rewrote their customer support system's front-end > with JSF. The system was written by MyFaces committers Thomas Spiegl and > Martin Marinscheck. > > Excerpt: > > During approximately five months of part-time work on the project, > Marinschek and Spiegl, as well as one developer at Prisma, built > Prisma.Net. Prisma.Net serves as a hub for about 2,000 clients, managing > their accounts and allowing them to track payments and claims, examine > contractual terms, and perform other account management duties. > > In addition to standard JSF components, the team also used several custom > MyFaces components, such as the DataScroller and Navigation components. > They also developed several of their own custom components, including a > Popup component and a menu component based on the popular JSCookMenu > JavaScript library. Their custom components, in addition to enhanced error > reporting for the standard UIData component, have made their way into the > MyFaces code base of version 1.09, which was released on April 11th, 2005. > > For the full story, see: http://www.jsfcentral.com/trenches/trenches_3.html. > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > Kito D. Mann > Author, JavaServer Faces in Action > http://www.JSFCentral.com - JSF FAQ, news, and info > > Are you using JSF in a project? Send an e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > and you could win a free copy of JavaServer Faces in Action! > > -- Matthias Wessendorf
