On Thu, Mar 31, 2011 at 04:06:54PM -0500, Tim Donohue wrote: > But, as Graham mentions, Maven is probably not going away anytime soon. > It has become a "standard" tool in most major Java projects these days.
Agreed. Although, the more I work with Maven, the more I itch to try something sizable with Ant+Ivy, but that's my problem. But one thing I see is that Maven is sooo effective a servant that it discourages thinking about how others are going to (a) find and (b) understand what one has built. We have to make ourselves capture and expose to others how we have thought about the things that we've given over to Maven to manage for us. I need to revisit the tweaking I did on the "mvn site" output and get it into trunk so we can make site building part of the release process. Then we'll need checklists and guidelines for testing the resulting projects site for usability and coverage of essential information. And then we'll need a place to drop the stuff so it can be linked appropriately and used. -- Mark H. Wood, Lead System Programmer mw...@iupui.edu Asking whether markets are efficient is like asking whether people are smart.
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