Has anyone looked XMLC as an alternative to JSP? I've
been looking into Enhydra (http://www.enhydra.org),
the freeware, opensource Java/XMLC application server
(instead of it's earlier, proprietary JSP-ish JOLT).
It looks solid, well documented and it's moving along
nicely. Plus, it's built to do everything we've been
talking about using JSP for, all with XML and
servlets. I would greatly value anyone's assessment.
Josh
--- Foster Bob <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Careful. My reading of the spec is that JSP 1.0
> engines are not required to
> accept the <jsp:scriptlet> form of the <% tag. (See
> the last paragraph of
> section 3.1.) This is described as part of the XML
> format, for which
> support is not required. By the same logic, even if
> they do support XML
> format engines need not recognize this tag form in a
> non-XML format
> document.
>
> Because I could be wrong and probably a lot of
> people are going to make the
> assumption you did, I'm copying jsp-comments to
> invite clarification.
>
> Bob Foster
> Symantec Internet Tools http://www.visualcafe.com/
>
>
> ______________________________ Reply Separator
> _________________________________
> Subject: Re: The importance of processRequest()...
> Author: Scott Ferguson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> at
> Internet
> Date: 5/5/99 8:16 PM
>
>
> But you can easily replace the processRequest
> functionality with the following:
>
> <jsp:useBean id='login'
> class='com.caucho.login.Login' scope='session'>
> <% login.processRequest() %>
> </jsp:useBean>
>
> Or you can use
>
<jsp:scriptlet>login.processRequest()</jsp:scriptlet>
> if you hate
> the special tags.
>
> The old processRequest was a gross hack. It should
> remain dead.
>
> Scott Ferguson
> Caucho Technology
>
> Eric Lunt wrote:
>
> > I completely agree with John here. I know that
> the whole "event processing"
> > mechanism (.jsa stuff) is being "figured out" for
> JSP 1.1, and
> processRequest()
> > belongs in that family of events, but there are
> some problems that are
> > *much* easier to solve with the processRequest()
> machinery as it stands
> > in JSP 0.92. The "guarded pages" example John
> presents is a good one, and
> > I have a couple of other beans that require the
> request to initialize
> > their state. I can get around with with a common
> include file or scriptlet,
> > but it's less than ideal.
> >
>
>
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===
Josh McCormack
Creative Director
The Travelers Diary
http://www.travelersdiary.com
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