LOL - do you do stand-up on the weekends, James? ;-) James Mitchell wrote:
>Yes, because Struts is a framework that is built on established J2EE >Technologies, and not just a big fat servlet. > >If you only need a servlet to produce a page or setup some beans to use in a >jsp, then you are better off writing your own servlet. It's a lot faster. > >Then, when your boss says to make it work in Spanish, you can rewrite it >from scratch to also support Spanish. It's crazy, I know, but that might be >what they want. > >When your web page becomes popular, they may ask you to add a menu to it. >Then when you demo it, they want it on the left side, not the top. Oops, >should have picked Tiles. > >Man! Your servlet is hummin now. It would great if we could force the user >to enter all the required data before they submit the form. Great, now you >have to add validation. Oops, someone discovered that users can turn off >your javascript, so now you have to duplicate the validation on the server >side. Crap, should got the validator. > >Frameworks like Struts provide a very powerful tool to help developers go >from Use Cases to Test Cases. >Struts in particular, provides this in an efficient and flexible way. > >I cannot say thanks enough to the folks who are making Struts a >success....THANK YOU!!!!! > > > >James Mitchell >Software Engineer\Struts Evangelist >Struts-Atlanta, the "Open Minded Developer Network" >http://www.open-tools.org/struts-atlanta > -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

