Another nice article.  At some point I'll work on a link to these
articles from the MyFaces website.  They are great publicity for JSF!

sean


On 5/23/05, Kito D. Mann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
> 
> I'm pleased to announce another installment in JSF Central's "In the
> Trenches" series about real world projects that use JavaServer Faces. This
> article examines how a software development firm in Nashville, Tennesee
> used JSF to build a Point of Sale system.
> 
> Here's a quote:
> 
> Late last year, a Tennessee-based software development company, located in
> Nashville, was approached by a major client in the home improvement
> industry interested in simplifying the selling process for their retail
> employees. The client needed a system up and running quickly, and with over
> 1,000 stores averaging ten sales associates each, it had to be stable,
> scalable and responsive. Based on the business requirements and time
> estimates, Senior Software Engineer and Presentation Lead Ray Daniel and
> his co-workers realized that they would encounter some of the same issues
> that one of their Struts-based projects had faced. This time, however, they
> had the luxury of evaluating other web application frameworks that would
> reduce both development and maintenance costs.
> 
> "I approached the project manager about the possibility of using JavaServer
> Faces [JSF] for our presentation layer. I explained that I just finished
> porting a Struts applications to JSF and found it much easier to use and
> code against, that it promotes a cleaner separation of concerns with the
> other layers of an application, removes the need to riddle a JSP with
> scriplets, and reduces the number of lines of code needed on a JSP through
> the effective design and use of the JSF tag libraries," says Daniel.
> 
> To see the rest of the article, visit
> http://www.jsfcentral.com/trenches/trenches_4.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 your story to [EMAIL PROTECTED],
> and you could get your story published and win a free copy of JavaServer
> Faces in Action!
> 
>

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