I agree with you. I was wanting it to be for more non-newbie MVC developers and instructors/training. Maveric is good. You could do MVC in .NET. I used to do MVC in PowerBuilder. Struts has most interest now but I hope the list helps advance MVC. Vic.
Roy Truelove wrote: > I've noticed that on the Jakarta site that this mailing list has been named > as a newsgroup for Struts. I was originally under the impression (when I > saw the "MVC-Programmers" name) that this list would be implementation-free, > and discuss all of the other approaches to MVC programming, and not just > Struts. > > > > I'm asking this for a few reasons 1) Struts already has a forum. 2) I > believe that a forum on MVC programming, comparing and contrasting different > approaches without going into implementation details, would be *extremely* > useful to the community. I have yet to find a forum like this, and usually > have to go to each individual mailing list to see the pros and cons of > different approaches. > > > > I don't believe that Struts is the be-all-end-all of MVC approaches to web > design. That's why I think that a list like this would help to unify all of > the different approaches out there to create an industry standard using the > best practices of each. > > > > I would really appreciate some feedback on this, because I'd hate to see > this list become Struts only, and shun other technologies that might give > Struts some constructive criticism. > > > > Sorry for the soapbox, > > -Roy > > _______________________________________________ > MVC-Programmers mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://www.basebeans.com:8081/mailman/listinfo/mvc-programmers > _______________________________________________ MVC-Programmers mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.basebeans.com:8081/mailman/listinfo/mvc-programmers