Re: Wicket and JPA: please a simple way to go

2012-05-13 Thread dhar_ar
Has your company heard of NOSQL?

JPA is a standard and I agree with most of it, but there are times when good ol 
iBatis is more straight forward.

Looking at the future there are non RDBMS related databases; JPA is the way to 
go depending on where you are going.

For a community building a framework, they have to consider the community and 
not just a single line of thought. 

If you still feel that a single stack of technologies that provides a 360 
degree coverage. Check out "PLAY" !

They have re invented the paridgm and are ready to even discard the servlet 
specification (or make it optional)

I don't like that aspect of Play, but looks like you may enjoy it more. Its 
nice for that I could critcize it.

Wicke ftw for the rest.
Good luck


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-Original Message-
From: hfriederichs 
Date: Sun, 13 May 2012 00:23:32 
To: 
Reply-To: users@wicket.apache.org
Subject: RE: Wicket and JPA: please a simple way to go

All standards are equal, but some (like JPA) are more equal than others,
that's what you mean?

Well, a short look at the history of computing shows that technologies with
obvious and proven qualities, 
unanimously supported by experts, sometimes still don't survive. Other
qualities are needed...

In my company, JPA is the way to go.

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Re: I have to say.....

2012-03-15 Thread dhar_ar
Yup I agre; except I think the way messages are shared across fedback panels 
still defies logic. Am sure someone went out of his way to program it that way!
--Original Message--
From: mlabs
To: users@wicket.apache.org
ReplyTo: users@wicket.apache.org
Subject: I have to say.
Sent: Mar 15, 2012 2:27 PM

I've been working with Wicket for about a year now and although the learning
curve is somewhat initially steep .. it really is a great piece of work ..
kudos to the designers...  

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Re: Need Wicket Book

2010-11-12 Thread dhar_ar
I agree with you; the idea of a book should really be to clarify concepts. 
Because technology keeps moving on and that's where the code and user forums 
come is. But a foundation ;..specially on architecture and life cycles is best 
explained bya book. That's what I"m searching for . But each one to their own!

:)

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-Original Message-
From: "Frank Silbermann" 
Date: Fri, 12 Nov 2010 09:40:42 
To: 
Reply-To: users@wicket.apache.org
Subject: RE: Need Wicket Book

When I coded my application originally based on Wicket 1.2, I after looking at 
the DataTable example, I had to peruse the DataTable (and, for 1.2, 
DefaultDataTable) code to figure out what I needed to do for my task.

Even if I had had_Wicket_in_Action_ at my disposal back then, I think I still 
would have had to look at the DataTable implementation.

Perhaps with open source it is expected that users will have to look at the 
implementation code now and then, but I think for many people it is a 
psychological hurdle.  /Frank

-Original Message-
From: Martijn Dashorst [mailto:martijn.dasho...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Friday, November 12, 2010 8:57 AM
To: users@wicket.apache.org
Subject: Re: Need Wicket Book

On Fri, Nov 12, 2010 at 3:24 PM, Frank Silbermann
 wrote:
> Does any Wicket book describe the use of Wicket Extensions, such as
> DataTable?  I didn't see anything on that subject in _Wicket_in_Action_.

In order to keep the book manageable (in thickness) and to be able to
publish it on some derailed schedule, datatable and extensions friends
were not included. It would probably have costed another 20 pages or
so to properly discuss datatable, and another 20 to quickly summarize
each component in extensions.

We believe that the explanations offered in Wicket in Action should
provide anyone to fully grasp Wicket concepts and that should suffice
to have a really quick understanding of anything wicket extensions
throws at you (unless you look at modal window, or the tree components
;-)

Martijn

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Re: Need Wicket Book

2010-11-12 Thread dhar_ar
Yes I did see one mention it; see my post. The other book . On my phone so 
can't remember the name.

They don't have a paypal option and I can't remember the name so that's bad 
marketing for them. But looks like a good book (I read the sample chapters)
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-Original Message-
From: "Frank Silbermann" 
Date: Fri, 12 Nov 2010 08:24:36 
To: 
Reply-To: users@wicket.apache.org
Subject: RE: Need Wicket Book

Does any Wicket book describe the use of Wicket Extensions, such as
DataTable?  I didn't see anything on that subject in_Wicket_in_Action_.


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