the .NET heads ( is there a term used to describe them? ) come back and say
that it is easier and faster to build in C# then Java. They say that the
tools to work with C# are better ( I don't agree ).

Having worked with VS.NET and various Java IDEs I can say that .NET developers don't know what they're missing. They might have easy gui construction but VS is woefully lacking in ease of use and features (the most noticeable to me is the lack of automated refactorings).


David


In fairness, we should
not assume that .NET developers are going to skip design or write GUIs with
no functionality. We should look at the total cost of development.

I must take issue with your point that
 "It's this complexity that goes begging when UI construction is the sole
(or even majority) measure of productivity."

The fact is that as of right now you can build and maintain a GUI using .NET
faster and easier (read productivity). You can build rich and complex
functionality using C#. The building the business functionality is basically
on par between Java and C#. Is it not fair to say that the productivity
gained in the GUI construction is a clear win for .NET?


If you take two groups one for Java/Struts/et. al. and one for .NET, where
they are equally proficient in their respective technologies, and give them
the same application to build, which will be done first? Bottom line who
gets the job done first? The business world has decided that the .NET team
will be done first. From what I have seen myself I have little reason to
doubt this.

I have made the argument about how much richer Java is as a language, and
what I hear back is that the difference between Java and C# is like the
difference between Coke and Pepsi. Again, perception is reality.

Good tools do have a direct impact on development schedules. When are we
going to have JSF and the tools to support it? Are the anti-Microsquish
league (IBM, SUN, Oracle, et. al.) going to come up with tools to match
.NET?

Lastly, one of our teams here is writing a .NET front-end talking to Web
Services supplied by a Java J2EE middle tier. The say they are having their
cake and are able to eat it too. The interesting thing is they are
succeeding and are getting their applications to the users faster and
management has noticed.

Glenn


-----Original Message----- From: Chris Gerrard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, June 13, 2003 1:48 PM To: Struts Developers List Subject: RE: Struts can't "get its act together" - JavaPro


Glenn,


I'm continuously unimpressed by the implicit assumption that "Developer
Productivity" == "GUI construction". The blind acceptance of this hoary old
chestnut has been a huge impediment to real progress in developing better
systems.

Given that the rapid construction of a UI is a good thing, what's my beef?

Simply put, there's a whole world of complexity behind the UI that needs to
be conceived of, designed, and implemented before the application is
useful. It's this complexity that goes begging when UI construction is the
sole (or even majority) measure of productivity.

There are levels of productivity. GUI building is on the surface, easy to
see. But it's thin, and not nourishing. Real productivity lies in the
ability to provide rich, complex functionality that supports real people in
getting real things done.

GUI tools tend to concentrate on the thin layer on top, providing some
hardwired mechanism(s) underneath to support the UI. This is an extreme
limitation in real productivity in that it limits the access the developers
have to the underlying bits. Struts provides the framework that lets us
deal with the UI and get past it into the Java world where we're really
limited only by our own skills and knowledge.

Like Vic said in his post, I provide training in Struts (and other stuff)
to corporate clients. I recently mentored a bunch of mainframe programmers
starting up with Java/Struts in order to reimplement their existing FoxPro
application. It's a simple customer info collection application - get some
info into a form, save it, find it, update it, save the changes. The UI
side of things is straightforward with Struts, as it would be with other
technologies. BUT, real complexity lies unspoken in the "find it"
functionality.

The naive approach is to provide a single-field input form accepting a
client ID# which is used to look up the info. Next up is the "search form"
approach: "Let's give them a form that looks like the input form, let them
fill in some value(s) and then search for their info". OK, now we're
talking. What fields are on the form? How do the values entered interact
with one another - implicit ANDs or ORs, or do we try to give them a real
query builder? And so it goes. Even better, as the user population gains
experience with the application, having a flexible powerful language and
platform underneath employed via strong, supple frameworks and
architectures makes it much, much easier to continually improve things than
is the case for systems built from GUI-oriented tools lacking Java's access
to the machinery.

Up until now the Java world has concentrated on core technology, and
thereby enabled core productivity. Struts has brought us up to the surface,
and things have always improved. I'm really hoping that JavaServer Faces
will provide the rapid UI-building experience other tools and technologies
enjoy. Once that happens the world will change. It'll be Java all the way
down.

Chris

At 03:14 PM 6/11/2003, you wrote:
>Chris,
>I tend to agree with your assessment of JavaPro but I'd like to open this
up
>a little. Right now we are faced with two choices for web development .Net
>or not .Net. I can over-simplify the arguments for and against .Net as the
>following:
>
>.NET
>Pluses
>Developer Productivity
>Negatives
>Vendor lock in.
>
>Others (including Struts)
>Pluses
>No vendor lock in
>Negatives
>Less developer Productivity
>
>It seems like many if not most companies are more interested in developer
>productivity.
>
>Does anyone know of, or foresee any means by which we (developers) will be
>able to be as productive using Struts/JSP/DHTML/JavaScript etc. as people
>are using .Net? I'd love to be able to make a case against .Net .
>
>Thanks
>
>Glenn
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Chris Gerrard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Sent: Wednesday, June 11, 2003 12:07 PM
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Stuts can't "get its act together" - JavaPro
>
>
>I found this announcement today on JavaPro's August Issue online "In Brief"
>site:
>http://www.ftponline.com/javapro/2003_08/magazine/departments/inbrief/defau
l
>t.asp
>
>The blurb:
>Developer Tools
>TurboM2
>Tired of waiting for The Apache Group to get its act together with the
>Struts initiative, Virtuas has launched a framework of its own. Virtuas
>released TurboM2 previously under the name Web Application Model (WAM).
>Since then, the company decided to alter the product to perform many of the
>features Struts offers, and like Struts will be released under the open
>source model.
>
>There's more, but on casual inspection it appears that JavaPro has simply
>regurgitated some marketing poo from Virtuas intended to convey the
>impression that Struts is in a funk and not moving forward. (so one should
>naturally move to Virtuas' TurboM2 product)
>
>Upon casual inspection it appears that TurboM2 is a fairly direct clone of
>Struts. On of Virtuas' value-added claims is that TurboM2 has available
>support and training that Struts does not.
>
>Links:
>Virtuas TurboM2: http://www.turbom2.org/index.html
>Struts/TurboM2 comparison: http://www.turbom2.org/docs/Comparison.pdf
>
>The part that disturbs me is JavaPro's presenting this whole pile as if it
>were truth. Someone reading this article could well be persuaded that yes,
>indeed, Struts is in trouble and they should look elsewhere. I've been less
>than impressed with JavaPro's content for some time, and this erodes my
>confidence in their editorial control and knowledge of the Java world even
>further.




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