Azizi,
To state that Stripes adoption and use hinges on JSR-168/286 support in the
library is a strawman argument; it would be akin to correlate Spring MVC
success/adoption solely on portlet support.
FWIW, my vote would be “No” for direct JSR-286 support in Stripes to the
committer team. Frankly, JSR-286 is all but dead, practically only supported by
Liferay (which is a great product, but I would never recommend it if only
because it is intended as a JSR-168/286 stack). The portlet specs are, at best,
on lifesupport with Oracle, IBM and JBoss (RedHat) in favor of OpenSocial
compatible APIs, e.g., like Apache Rave and Apache Shindig.
Finally, some thoughts on where JSR-168/286 is in 2012 from 2009 that nicely
contrasts the promising beginnings with the realities of use, implementation,
and age:
http://today.java.net/pub/a/today/2009/01/20/jsr-286-portlet-irrelevance.html
Bottomline, I can do “portals” without a single portlet. However, I do
sympathize with those that are forced into a Portlet platform, any one. I’ve
been there. Worse architecture experience of my career.
Regards,
Tim
From: azizi yazit [mailto:aziziya...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, October 05, 2012 8:42 AM
To: Stripes Users List
Subject: Re: [Stripes-users] Liferay portlets
If stripes want the framework to be used by more ppl, let's start provide that.
On Oct 5, 2012 8:38 PM, "Thomas Menke"
<stripe...@cipher-code.de<mailto:stripe...@cipher-code.de>> wrote:
On 10/04/2012 08:26 PM, Grzegorz Krugły wrote:
> In the project I'm on right now I'm forced to develop Liferay projects.
> It's a road through pain. I am wondering if anyone tried and was
> successful in using Stripes for portlet development? Is there some kind
> of integration available?
I faced the same challenge a while ago. But it turned out to be not as
easy as I hoped it would be. Eventually I ended up using Spring MVC
which supports JSR-286.
Thomas
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