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The following page has been changed by FrankZammetti:
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      * [plightbo] By running our interceptors and other objects through the 
same factories and lifecycle managers that the action classes go through, this 
should be a non issue.
      * [mrdon] This I'd like to see.  I've found myself using these objects so 
often in wierd little places, I'd be loath to remove them unless we could prove 
100% that their information can be retrieved elsewhere.
      * [jcarreira] +1 to Patrick's point... we may need to introduce some more 
advanced *Aware interfaces, though, to give people access to the guts if they 
really want it.
+     * [frankz] !ActionContext being !ThreadLocal was one of the first "cool" 
things I noticed about WW.  I'd hate to see that change.  The only thing I can 
think of that would make me agree to change that is that I think we may find 
developers using it in "inappropriate" ways, i.e., an Action calls a business 
delegate and the delegate uses !ActionContext.  My bet is most people would 
agree it should be a "best practice" to not do that.  Still, it's cool that you 
can!
  
    1. Is `ValidationAware` a good name? Perhaps `Errors` or `ErrorList` would 
be a better name.
  
@@ -117, +118 @@

        * [crazybob] Triggering an event should still be a POST (though the 
framework should make it easy). From the HTTP spec.: "GET and HEAD methods 
SHOULD NOT have the significance of taking an action other than retrieval."
        * [jcarreira] I think it's great that you want to take the HTTP spec at 
its word... most users don't care though.
        * [crazybob] I'm not arguing semantics. There are real security 
implications to using GET when you should use POST, not to mention products 
like Google Web Accelerator will reak havok on your site. As framework 
developers, we should make using POST as easy as GET for users. To not help 
users do the right thing in this situation would be irresponsible, and not in 
the letter of the law sense.
+       * [frankz] Perhaps a new attribute on the <action> mapping?  
type="view" or type="update"?  This would really make the mapping of a specific 
various type, not the underlying Action, which might be better because the type 
is abstracted from the actual implementation and the Action class itself can 
house both types of functions (i.e., something like a !DispatchAction), but the 
framework can know to treat them differently as appropriate.  I'm not one of 
those "no XML config!" folks, I actually still prefer it to annotations, but 
having an analogous annotation would be a good idea too.
  
    1. On the OGNL value stack `#request` refers to request attributes and 
`#parameters` refers to the parameters. We could rename these `#request` for 
request parameters and `#requestAttributes` for request attributes.
  
@@ -155, +157 @@

  
    1. The ajax support is pitiful. Have a look at how stripes does it. Ajax 
for validation is trivial and not that impressive, but people are going to want 
to do real ajax work, and webwork does absolutely nothing to help in that 
regard. I'd like to for example be able to easily invoke actions and get at 
some kind of result to display, and have webwork provide at least some of the 
wiring
      * [jcarreira] Well, that's a relatively simple usecase, and I think it IS 
supported... at least we use it at work?
+     * [frankz] I would ask what "real AJAX work" means, because that would 
really determine what path makes sense.
  
    1. The default theme for the ui tags should be simple. The current stuff is 
too dumb to get right on the first go, which gives an awful impression. It's 
NOT intuitive to write: {{{
  <table>
@@ -165, +168 @@

  
    1. File upload should support progress notification. Have a look at 
webwork-multipart on java.net, it's based on the pell parser but has a progress 
API.
      * [jcarreira] We've implemented this at work with WebWork fileupload + 
DWR + a class that looks at the file as it's uploading to see how big it is on 
disk
+     * [frankz] Just an opinion, but this seems to me too specific a use case 
for a framework to encapsulate.  I think having an example showing how to do 
it, perhaps what jcarreira has done at work, would be great, but I for one 
wouldn't like the framework offering this out of the box... I think it is 
possible for a framework to be able to do TOO much!
  
    1. Better error checking for UI tags. The freemarker error message, while 
great for freemarker users, look like gibberish. People should not be forced to 
learn freemarker. So in such cases, the tags themselves should check the 
parameters and report back sane messages, even if that check is duplicated in 
the templates
  
@@ -173, +177 @@

    1. Get rid of the validation framework. it's stupid and pointless, validate 
methods are good enough.
      * [jcarreira] -1 I take offense at this... It's neither stupid NOR 
pointless, and we use it extensively. It's the best validation framework I've 
seen out there, and NO, validate methods are NOT enough. For instance, we 
define reusable validations for our domain models and use them for both the web 
front end as well as web services and batch imports. 
      * [tmjee] -1 If possible please don't do so. I use it and like it. I 
guess (for me at least), sometimes for simple validation it is nice to be able 
to just describe it (using xml or annotation). Plus the validation could be 
tied to DWR for ajax support. Being able to write custom validator is really 
cool. Please reconsider this. :-)
+     * [frankz] -1 as well.  If you had said the validation framework could 
stand to be enhanced and expanded on a bit, I'd agree, but I definitely think 
it should be there, not pointless or stupid at all.  Declarative validation is 
a fantastic approach, especially with validator being a separate Commons 
component.  For instance, we are working on a project at work that is going to 
use Validator and the CoR implementation in JWP as the basis for a rules 
engine... I put together a proof of concept showing how we could use the exact 
same validations in the web front-end via AJAX calls as in the Web Service 
interface for other systems to call on.  Being able to write those validations 
in XML without having to write actual code was a great thing.
  
    1. Ditch xwork as a separate project, nobody uses it or cares about it
      * [jcarreira] You're kidding, right? We've discussed this already.... 
@@ -192, +197 @@

    1. Don't dismiss XML entirely - annotations are nice but currently can't be 
HotSwapped (due to a bug in the JDK). For any configuration, we should read in 
the following order: XML, annotations, convention.
      * [jcarreira] Shouldn't annotations be the default, and XML be the 
override?
      * [crazybob] I think that's what he means. Speaking of annotations, I've 
yet to see a method for representing result mappings using annotations that I 
actually like (due to limitations of annotations). If we can't come up with 
something decent, I'd just assume stick with XML; we shouldn't use annotations 
for the sake of using annotations. I personally don't find the xwork.xml as 
annoying as XML in other places. If we do simple things like defaulting the 
action name to the simple name of the action class, it will be even more 
pleasant. I definitely think we should use annotations for things like 
validation.
+     * [frankz] I for one have zero problem with annotations being an option, 
even being the default, but do keep in mind that not everyone sees annotations 
as really being that great of an idea.  I acknowledge it might the minority 
view now, but I for one see it as configuration information scattered 
throughout the code base, rather than in one known location (read: XML config 
file), so speaking for myself, I am not entirely sold on annotations being 
superior to XML config files (assuming the config files aren't overly complex 
that is!)
  
    1. Fail fast with detailed error messages, ideally ones that show you what 
you did wrong and what you should to.
       * [Gabe] +1 I've created an XWork issue related: 
[http://jira.opensymphony.com/browse/XW-388]
@@ -219, +225 @@

  
    1. How does WW help the user with state management?  As far as I can tell, 
if I want to keep a 'user' object around I have to interact with the map 
returned by ActionContext.getSession().  Actions should in general have a 
type-safe and transparent way to do this, e.g. by subclassing ActionContext and 
providing getUser()/setUser() which store the user in session.  This allows for 
re-working of the storage strategy (e.g. write a cookie and lookup the user 
each time) without affecting actions.
    1. In tandem with the previous point, since Actions are already stateful, 
it'd be nice to have the ActionContext injected into the Action.  One benefit 
is when a newbie developer needs it, the linkage is obvious (they don't have to 
a priori know about the ActionContext, they're being handed in it on a 
platter). If the developer can subclass ActionContext, it would also encourage 
them to implement a base action which accepts the context inject and leveraging 
the fact that JDK 1.5 allows co-variant returns, also write a getContext() 
method that returns the down-casted type; they wouldn't have to do 
((MyActionContext) ActionContext.getContext()).getUser() for example, just 
getContext().getUser().
+     * [frankz] This might well address the issue of !ActionContext being 
!ThreadLocal.  If it was injected, it wouldn't need to be !ThreadLocal to get 
the same basic effect, and maybe more importantly, it wouldn't automatically be 
available to helper classes as it is as a !ThreadLocal.  That would address my 
concern about "inappropriate" usage of !ActionContext.
    1. HTML analog tags should stick to HTML attributes. I dont' mean they 
shouldn't have more functionality, but the attributes should be identical where 
possible, and they shouldn't do things like render a label and an input.  
Keeping them more like regular HTML tags makes them easier to ramp up on, and 
more non-developer friendly
      * [MJ] I see the following options when it comes to tags. (1) Use plain 
HTML + implicit scoped variables like "actionName", "actionAddress", etc. to 
create dynamic values; this looks pretty compact with JSP 2.0. (2) Use 1:1 
relation between WW tags and HTML tags. (3) Use 1:M relation between WW tags 
and HTML tags, like to create data entry form or a table. (4) Use 
non-HTML-looking tags + more abstract attributes + "media" attribute, thus 
creating something like JSF renderer for different media. Choosing between (1) 
and (2) I prefer the first one.
    1. Actions should return concrete objects, not symbolic results.  Symbolic 
results might have been optimal when you had one event/method per action and 
the outcomes were always whole-page views, but they get in the way now.  When 
you want to return anything that requires more than the symbol, you have to do 
some less than intuitive things to make the Action and the Result cooperate.  
I'd prefer to see a concrete Result get returned from Action methods, which 
would allows developers to do more powerful things more easily.  There are a 
bunch of ways to make it backward compatible too.  You could return 'new 
SymbolicResult("success")' and have the SymbolicResult do the lookup stuff (You 
could even redefine the String constants to be SymbolicResults).  You could 
alternatively use a static class to do Results.find(SUCCESS).  Or you could 
even allow method to continue to return String or Result, and if String wrap it 
in a SymbolicResult.
+     * [frankz] +1.  This is one area where I personally think Struts had it 
right and we've seen frameworks getting it "wrong" subsequently.  
!ActionForward I believe is the right concept, even if the realization might 
not be optimal.  I think the difference between return "ok"; and return new 
ActionResult("ok"); is pretty minimal, but the later opens up a lot of 
possibilities being a true object that can have behaviors and properties and 
such.
  
  
  == Nice to haves ==
@@ -267, +275 @@

    * [Gabe] I am required to use 1.4 at work. To me the question of whether to 
require 1.5 comes down to whether the same shops that are stuck using 1.4 are 
also not going to let people use Struts 2.0, because it is too bleeding edge 
anyway. In that case it doesn't make sense to allow 1.4, because the only 
people who would be using it would also have access to 1.5 anyway. I don't know 
if that is the case though.
    * [martinc] The big issue with the JDK version is app servers. This comes 
in two parts. First is whether all of the major app server vendors have 
products available that support the desired SDK version. I believe we're OK in 
that regard with JDK 1.5. The bigger issue is customer acceptance. Enterprise 
customers, especially, tend to standardise on their app server, and they are 
not quick to upgrade. Unless the application vendor has a great deal of 
influence over the customer's infrastructure, the vendor has to live with 
whatever app server version is in use at the customer site. It is rare, then, 
that the application vendor can dictate the JDK version. On the other hand, the 
customer usually couldn't care less what version of Struts the application was 
built with.
    * [tfenne] I think you *have* to support JDK 1.5, and it should be the 
default. If it's not too hard to provide 1.4 compatibility great, but I think 
all examples, defaults etc. should leverage 1.5. Generics allow you to do much 
more for the user without asking for configuration information. If a user wants 
to use JDK 1.5 enums, it should work, etc. etc. If it's extra work on the 
user's part to make 1.5 features work, simplicity goes out the window.
+   * [frankz] I think this is one of those things to be really careful about 
the perception people may form.  If Action1 is going to continue to develop and 
be supported, even if to a lesser degree, then forcing 1.5 for Action2 is 
probably fine.  However, I know at my company, we are stuck on 1.4, and won't 
be changing for a long time.  I also know that we are not unique in this 
regard.  If we can't move to Action2. so long as Action1 is still around and 
being supported, that's fine.  But if we can't move to Action2 and it even 
'''seems''' like Action1 isn't getting enough attention, that wouldn't look so 
good to us.  Ultimately, if both can be supported, I think that is still the 
best answer.  I definitely think the points made about moving to 1.5 are 
totally valid, but I think that may lock out a lot of people who might 
otherwise use Action2, so if that can be avoided, so much the better.
  

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