I'm just a small-time development shop in a third-world country, but in my current work environment (Oracle IAS and WAS 5 mostly, some Tomcats) it will take ages for my customers to upgrade to JDK 1.4 -capable app servers. Except for the Tomcat installations, they're still on 1.3...
This would mean for me no TP4, and though I'm perfectly happy with 3.0.3, there are plenty of improvements in version 4 that I would be missing. Now, is the latest 4.0.x version stable enough for production? I've been following the list closely but it's a little bit difficult to evaluate how buggy it **really** is... On 12/20/05, Jason Suplizio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > We don't have the flexibility to make a quick migration between JDK > versions. As a result, mandating 1.5 might force us to completely > reevaluate our framework decision. This is really unfortunate as I > personally prefer 1.5 and love Tapestry. > > > On 12/20/05, Howard Lewis Ship <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > wrote: > > > > With Tapestry 4.0 winding down, some of us are already looking forward > > to Tapestry 4.1. > > > > Now, we would hope that 4.1 will not have as long a life cycle as 4.0, > > which was 50% too long. I would hope for a final 4.1 by Q3 2006. > > > > One thing that I, personally, would like would be to start re-working > > the APIs to make use of JDK 1.5 annotations and generics. Unlike the > > add-one annotation support in Tapestry 4.0, this would MANDATE JDK 1.5 > > for development and production. > > > > This is obviously a contentious issue, so I'm asking people to look > > into their personal crystal ball and see what they and they're > > organization will look like by next summer, in terms of JDK adoption. > > > > -- > > Howard M. Lewis Ship > > Independent J2EE / Open-Source Java Consultant > > Creator, Jakarta Tapestry > > Creator, Jakarta HiveMind > > > > Professional Tapestry training, mentoring, support > > and project work. http://howardlewisship.com > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > > > > -- "Painting: The art of protecting flat surfaces from the weather and exposing them to the critic." Ambrose Bierce --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]