Of aaronvm707
Sent: Thursday, June 07, 2007 11:39 AM
To: flexcoders@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [flexcoders] Re: Flex Java, Where to Start?
Thank you very much for all the info. I think the key word I was
looking for was EJB. Is this what I will develop in order to start
using Flex Data Services
Sun has a very comprehensive online documentation of the Java language.
This is a good book if you are a seasoned developer and just wanting
to pick up Java Java In A Nutshell by David Flanagan, O'Reilly.
Another really good book is Just Java 2 by Peter van der Linden, Sun
Microsystems
Thank you very much for all the info. I think the key word I was
looking for was EJB. Is this what I will develop in order to start
using Flex Data Services?
Any suggestions on the server software needed to run EJB J2EE? Again
I am moving from a Microsoft, .net, IIS environment so I am completly
Hi Aaron,
You don't need EJB or J2EE to start with FDS. In fact, I would
recommend trying familiarize yourself with plain FDS before attempting
to integrate with enterprise java.
What you do need is a servlet container. Typically tomcat. FDS comes
with a lite version of another servlet
Subject: [flexcoders] Re: Flex Java, Where to Start?
Thank you very much for all the info. I think the key word I was
looking for was EJB. Is this what I will develop in order to start
using Flex Data Services?
Any suggestions on the server software needed to run EJB J2EE? Again
I am moving
Thank you, this is great info. I have been using Eclipse for flex
misc programming and love it.
--- In flexcoders@yahoogroups.com, Robert Cadena [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Aaron,
You don't need EJB or J2EE to start with FDS. In fact, I would
recommend trying familiarize yourself with
6 matches
Mail list logo