subsumed? I had never heard that word before. Thanks for the vocabulary lesson.
Main Entry: sub·sume Pronunciation: s&b-'süm Function: transitive verb Inflected Form(s): sub·sumed; sub·sum·ing Etymology: New Latin subsumere, from Latin sub- + sumere to take up -- more at CONSUME : to include or place within something larger or more comprehensive : encompass as a subordinate or component element <red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color"> -Al On 12/12/06, Ean Schuessler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tuesday 12 December 2006 12:08, Yoav Shapira wrote: > Hi, > Talking about JavaScript toolkits is becoming like talking about > programming languages: it's an endless debate about religious > zealotry, really ;) > > Dojo is good, it works. Prototype is good, it works. Dojo is being > adopted as a standard by some Java libraries, like Struts 2 IIRC. > Prototype is a de-facto standard in the Ruby on Rails world. Hence my > first sentence above. > > As long as you're considering options for OFBiz, I'd throw another > candidate in the ring: jQuery (http://jquery.com/). It's a fantastic > little library that also works well, but importantly for me, solves my > biggest complaints about Dojo and prototype: size. Both Dojo and > prototype end up adding hundreds of KBs to the size of your web page. > Sure they might get cached on the client or elsewhere along the way, > but still, the software engineer in me hates the thought of all that > baggage. <trolling> We need something thin, like OFBiz! ;-) From a strategic point of view I think that Dojo has a lot of inertia developing in the Java community and that is going to pay off for us. Everyone with any sense knows that Ruby is doomed to be subsumed by the unstoppable Linux+Java stack since no one seriously believes that Linux+Ruby is a viable adversary against Windows+.NET. </trolling> Actually, this JQuery stuff looks intruiging. -- Ean Schuessler, CTO [EMAIL PROTECTED] 214-720-0700 x 315 Brainfood, Inc. http://www.brainfood.com
