[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Apologies for the rather general question.
Some more details:
- What are your goals?
Port an application to a web based app.
- What are your constraints?
Has to be a windows based web based solution. Our developers would probably
prefer to use ASP.NET to build website.
- Do you have restrictions in terms of the webserver and R backend or not?
Will use windows IIS web server.
- Is this Rapid Development for one-offs, or rather industrial strength ?
Industrial strength, it has to be high quality.
- How many users?
- How many concurrent users?
Potentially hundreds of users and it has to handle concurrency probably up to a max of 8 users.
- Light or heavy analysis?
Generally medium.
Has anyone implemneted a web based solution using the package rJAva?
Wayne
-----Original Message-----
From: Dirk Eddelbuettel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 18 November 2008 15:15
To: Jones, Wayne GSUK-GSEA/1
Cc: r-sig-gui@stat.math.ethz.ch
Subject: Re: [R-gui] R web based application
Hi Wayne,
Caveat: I am not a web-developer.
On 18 November 2008 at 15:14, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
| I am looking in to porting an application I have written in R to an R web based application.
| Can anyone suggest based on their own experiences what may be the best method to accomplish this?
I find the question somewhat under-specified:
- What are your goals?
- What are your constraints?
- Do you have restrictions in terms of the webserver and R backend or not?
- Is this Rapid Development for one-offs, or rather industrial strength ?
- How many users?
- How many concurrent users?
- Light or heavy analysis?
You can do some pretty nice things with Rpad, but I have also been impressed
with the bigger-iron stuff Greg Warnes does (did ?) around Zope. There is
more, but I guess you may get more useful answers if you provide more
focussed questions.
Cheers, Dirk
Speaking of ASP.NET, are there packages that allow an ASP.NET
application to use an R back end for statistics? I went looking for
statistical back ends to ASP.NET and didn't find anything that I thought
was worth spending money for.
--
M. Edward (Ed) Borasky
ruby-perspectives.blogspot.com/
"A mathematician is a machine for turning coffee into theorems." --
Alfréd Rényi via Paul Erdős
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