"nicola9000" wrote : It is a bit hard if you did not work with JSF and EJB3 before ( like me ) | When it start working it is nr. 1 :-)
Right, exactly. I had never used JSF or EJB3 before. I have used Hibernate and I really liked it, and EJB3 is very similar to Hibernate in concept (and uses a lot of Hibernate code). What I didn't like about Hibernate was the Session management stuff. The only good way to do it in Hibernate is to have the Session controlled by a filter so entities could stay attached as the page renders. And there were other problems. EJB3 + Seam solves all that, and also adds a ton of other cool features. It's just non-trivial to get it set up. What would be great would be a stand-alone application framework file set, that has everything ready to go. All the examples that come with Seam have build.xml files with stuff like include="../../build.xml", which makes them pretty hard to use in a new project. I'm trying to put together a generic app framework that has all the stuff I need, plus login and authorization filters, and the Tomahawk components, and it's stand-alone ready to build. That would be a tremendous help in getting people started on it. View the original post : http://www.jboss.com/index.html?module=bb&op=viewtopic&p=3967973#3967973 Reply to the post : http://www.jboss.com/index.html?module=bb&op=posting&mode=reply&p=3967973 _______________________________________________ jboss-user mailing list [email protected] https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/jboss-user
