RE: Restlet MVC

2008-11-26 Thread Jerome Louvel

Hi Avi,

Full agreement with Rob as well!

I have updated the FAQ as you suggested and reworded the rest of the entry for 
conciseness and to match the Restlet 1.1 API:
http://www.restlet.org/documentation/1.1/faq#10

Best regards,
Jérôme Louvel
--
Restlet ~ Founder and Lead developer ~ http://www.restlet.org
Noelios Technologies ~ Co-founder ~ http://www.noelios.com


-Message d'origine-
De : Avi Flax [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Envoyé : vendredi 21 novembre 2008 19:21
À : discuss@restlet.tigris.org
Objet : Re: Restlet MVC

On Fri, Nov 21, 2008 at 09:44, Tim Peierls [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Maybe the first line of that FAQ answer should be modified to avoid the word 
 implementation, e.g., There is a rough correspondence between the MVC 
 pattern [cite?] and the Restlet framework:

I think we can just change the word implementing to following. But
I like the sentence you've proposed; I think we could just add that to
the answer, as the first sentence, like so:

There is only a rough correspondence between the a
href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model-view-controller;MVC
pattern/a and the Restlet framework; some a
href=http://n2.nabble.com/Restlet-MVC-tp1560691p1561792.html;debate/a
exists as to whether it should be employed at all. For those who wish
to follow the MVC pattern with Restlet, here is the basic
proposition:

How's that?

Jerome, maybe it's time to move the FAQ to the Wiki so it can be more
readily edited!



Re: Restlet MVC

2008-11-21 Thread Thierry Boileau

Hello,

there is only one instance of an Application (this principle also 
applies to instances of Restlet sub classes) whereas instances of the 
Resource class are generated at runtime. One instance of Resource is in 
charge to handle one pair of Request/Response.
Generally, the constructor of a Resource is the place where you retrieve 
the underlying business objects. This helps to know if your Resource is 
available or not, what is it's current state, etc. Then the 
acceptRepresentation, removeRepresentations, etc methods are the places 
to implement business logic.



Best regards,
Thierry Boileau
--
Restlet ~ Core developer ~ http://www.restlet.org http://www.restlet.org/
Noelios Technologies ~ Co-founder ~ http://www.noelios.com 
http://www.noelios.com/

  i am creating a web application using Restlet based on MVC. i have
configured ServlerServlet to invoke my Application class, where i have all
the URI mappings. i am planning to use the Application class as controller
and Resource to implement business logic with other required patterns. 


can any one suggest me whether this is the correct way to go ahead to
implement MVC application in RESTlet? how and when the Application will be
loaded? is it for every request or once per application ? 


Thanks in advance.


Re: Restlet MVC

2008-11-21 Thread Rob Heittman
This is a purely theoretical observation and not really meant as an answer,
but I did want to sort of get it on the record here.
The MVC paradigm is a specific separation of concerns architecture which has
gained wide conceptual support because it has long been generally considered
best practice for GUI applications.  Overlaying MVC onto the internals of a
RESTful web application may encourage correct separation of concerns,  but
also may not.  MVC alone does not capture separations of concern at multiple
layers of an n-tier application.

REST works very well with a rich client (GWT, Flex RIA, SWT, Swing...) that
has its own complex UI, ideally implemented using the MVC pattern.  As
Thierry says, the internals of a Restlet application can be composed using
an MVC way of thinking.  Here, though, the MVC pattern is not an automatic
best practice and you may do better to just study the concerns in your
server and leveraging the concepts in Restlet (which in turn are REST
concepts) without reference to MVC.  Fielding mentions MVC in passing in his
REST dissertation, when surveying preexisting peer-to-peer architectures,
but REST itself is not based on an MVC way of thinking.

I would argue that there is not a correct way of implementing MVC in
Restlet ... it's just that if you choose to think about server-side things
this way, there are ways (as Thierry outlines) of accomplishing this.
 Personally, I would set aside thinking about MVC on the server, in favor of
thinking purely about REST.  I tend to find the MVC switch in my brain only
activates when writing client side code, where it is ideally suited.

You may get widely divergent opinions on the list, but that is mine!  :-)

- Rob

On Fri, Nov 21, 2008 at 2:09 AM, Gan123 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:



  i am creating a web application using Restlet based on MVC. i have
 configured ServlerServlet to invoke my Application class, where i have all
 the URI mappings. i am planning to use the Application class as controller
 and Resource to implement business logic with other required patterns.

 can any one suggest me whether this is the correct way to go ahead to
 implement MVC application in RESTlet? how and when the Application will be
 loaded? is it for every request or once per application ?

 Thanks in advance.
 --
 View this message in context:
 http://n2.nabble.com/Restlet-MVC-tp1560691p1560691.html
 Sent from the Restlet Discuss mailing list archive at Nabble.com.




Re: Restlet MVC

2008-11-21 Thread Avi Flax
Bravo, Rob! I agree 100%!
FYI, the FAQ has an entry on MVC:
http://www.restlet.org/documentation/1.1/faq#10

Not sure who wrote the answer, but if you do decide to follow MVC, I think
the approach presented in the answer makes a lot of sense.

Avi

--
Avi Flax » Lead Technologist » Partner » Arc90 » http://arc90.com


Re: Restlet MVC

2008-11-21 Thread Tim Peierls
Maybe the first line of that FAQ answer should be modified to avoid the word
implementation, e.g., There is a rough correspondence between the MVC
pattern [cite?] and the Restlet framework:
--tim

On Fri, Nov 21, 2008 at 9:18 AM, Avi Flax [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Bravo, Rob! I agree 100%!
 FYI, the FAQ has an entry on MVC:
 http://www.restlet.org/documentation/1.1/faq#10

 Not sure who wrote the answer, but if you do decide to follow MVC, I think
 the approach presented in the answer makes a lot of sense.

 Avi

 --
 Avi Flax » Lead Technologist » Partner » Arc90 » http://arc90.com



Re: Restlet MVC

2008-11-21 Thread Avi Flax
On Fri, Nov 21, 2008 at 09:44, Tim Peierls [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Maybe the first line of that FAQ answer should be modified to avoid the word 
 implementation, e.g., There is a rough correspondence between the MVC 
 pattern [cite?] and the Restlet framework:

I think we can just change the word implementing to following. But
I like the sentence you've proposed; I think we could just add that to
the answer, as the first sentence, like so:

There is only a rough correspondence between the a
href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model-view-controller;MVC
pattern/a and the Restlet framework; some a
href=http://n2.nabble.com/Restlet-MVC-tp1560691p1561792.html;debate/a
exists as to whether it should be employed at all. For those who wish
to follow the MVC pattern with Restlet, here is the basic
proposition:

How's that?

Jerome, maybe it's time to move the FAQ to the Wiki so it can be more
readily edited!


Restlet MVC

2008-11-20 Thread Gan123


  i am creating a web application using Restlet based on MVC. i have
configured ServlerServlet to invoke my Application class, where i have all
the URI mappings. i am planning to use the Application class as controller
and Resource to implement business logic with other required patterns. 

can any one suggest me whether this is the correct way to go ahead to
implement MVC application in RESTlet? how and when the Application will be
loaded? is it for every request or once per application ? 

Thanks in advance. 
-- 
View this message in context: 
http://n2.nabble.com/Restlet-MVC-tp1560691p1560691.html
Sent from the Restlet Discuss mailing list archive at Nabble.com.