Chris,
I come to this news group only and I found it is good enough. In fact, I picked up a lot tips from Craig. (salute Craig, :-) & @_@!
Sybase's Jaguar CTS (Component Transaction Server 3.0) is one of the Java/Cobra implementation of EJB (0.4 specs). There are a lot of cool ideas in design issue. You may check it out. www.sybase.com
Jeff
-----Original Message-----
From: Chris Macias [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, October 25, 1999 11:50 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: when to use Bean !!!
Craig,
A polite way of saying "RTFM", huh? :-)
What you didn't say (but could have) is that this is a JSP-specific
interest list, and the questions we're asking are really drifting across
the line from "JSP" to "Web application architecture". One of the many
growing pains of learning new technologies: figuring out where to ask your
questions.
Tom and Jeff,
Thanks to both of you for the feedback. I'd like to ask a (brief) follow up
question or three, and the guys who posted before me may as well, but I
wonder there is a more appropriate list we could move the thread to. Maybe
there's a "J2EE" list out there, one the covers the spectrum of server-side
Java technologies and how best to fit the pieces together. Anybody know if
this exists?
Christopher
-----Original Message-----
From: Craig McClanahan [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, October 25, 1999 11:05 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: when to use Bean !!!
Chris Macias wrote:
> ...and this could probably be expanded to "When to use a servlet and when
> to use a Bean and when to use an EJB", but now we're asking for a white
> paper! :-)
>
> But, seriously, can any of the gurus out there help out us newbies with
> some 'rules of thumb' for when to use which technology? Rough guesses and
> half-formed opinions welcome. It's more than we have now!
>
And don't forget to ask about how mail, directory servers, messaging, and
database
access fit in to the web application model as well :-).
A pretty good set of documentation that includes answers to these
questions, at
various levels of detail, is in the Java2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) pages
on the
JavaSoft web site.
I would start with the Overview and the associated white papers for
introductory
information. For servlet and JSP developers, the Application Programming
Model
manual includes some pretty comprehensive advice and examples of how this
all fits
together. There's also a sample application to illustrate the suggested
principles.
Craig McClanahan
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