Hello
    I doesn't konw what you mean, the bridge class is which one? Bridge.

Implementor is to "BridgeImple"? somethind seems wrong.




2010-04-09 



Will Vann 



发件人: Kito Mann 
发送时间: 2010-04-07  21:35:30 
收件人: MyFaces Development 
抄送: 
主题: Re: ANNOUNCE: Martin Marinschek on MyFaces 2.0, IRIAN, and RelatedTopics 
 
Hello Will,

You're correct: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridge_pattern. In this case, the 
Portlet Bridge's responsibility is to enable JSF developers to use the 
ExternalContext abstraction without actually worrying about the Portlet APIs.
---
Kito D. Mann | twitter: kito99 | Author, JSF in Action
Virtua, Inc. | http://www.virtua.com | JSF/Java EE training and consulting
http://www.JSFCentral.com - JavaServer Faces FAQ, news, and info | twitter: 
jsfcentral
+1 203-404-4848 x3

Sign up for the JSFCentral newsletter: http://oi.vresp.com/?fid=ac048d0e17




On Tue, Apr 6, 2010 at 11:45 PM, Will Van <[email protected]> wrote:

Hello,
It's a good interview to introduce myfaces.


It's confusing why  JSF portlet bridge called "bridge"? design patterns?


regards
--
vann



On Wed, Mar 31, 2010 at 8:52 AM, Kito Mann <[email protected]> wrote:

Hello,

In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D. Mann talks with Martin 
Marinschek about MyFaces, IRIAN, and related topics. This interview was 
recorded in December of 2009 at the JSF Summit conference in Orlando, Florida. 
Here is an excerpt:

Kito:     Let’s talk a little bit about the project. MyFaces was originally 
just an implementation but now it has grown into a very large set of projects. 
Tell us a bit about some of the different projects that are part of the MyFaces 
umbrella. 

Martin:   I hope I don’t miss anything. Of course there is the core MyFaces 
implementation and API. For the JSF implementation you have to do the API and 
the Impl, so it is actually two jars which are developed in the core section. 
Then there are the three component libraries: Trinidad, Tomahawk, and Tobago. 
Then there is Orchestra, which is a conversation scope implementation for long 
running conversations with integration to JPA as well. Then there is the JSF 
Portlet Bridge, and there is ExtVal validation integration for JSF, where you 
can put annotations on your managed beans and domain objects. It will directly 
be converted into JSF converters and validators, pretty nicely done. Now that 
bean validation has been standardized, it is also an implementation of bean 
validation, so you can use the bean validation annotations together with ExtVal.


Read the full article  here:  
http://www.jsfcentral.com/articles/marinschek-03-10.html

---
Kito D. Mann | twitter: kito99 | Author, JSF in Action
Virtua, Inc. | http://www.virtua.com | JSF/Java EE training and consulting
http://www.JSFCentral.com - JavaServer Faces FAQ, news, and info | twitter: 
jsfcentral
+1 203-404-4848 x3

Sign up for the JSFCentral newsletter: http://oi.vresp.com/?fid=ac048d0e17

<<attachment: 3a21e5f0-5fc7-3fa2-8e0d-612daf5b7c7d[1].jpg>>

Reply via email to