--- Dave <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Just FYI -
>
> You guys may already be aware of this, but I'd
> thought
> I'd throw it out anyway. There's an open-source
> project (under a Free-BSD
> style license) called Enhydra. They have an Object
> to Relational tool
> called
> DODs that has some nice features to include an Swing
> GUI. Take a look:
>
> http://www.enhydra.org/doc/DODS.html
>
No, I knew that Enhydra had an open-source application
server, but was sufficiently educated to realize that
an applicatin server is an opl.
No, Dave I wouldn't have put my brains on the rack, if
I knew all the answers were at a url.
Of course, jon probably thinks this self-torture is a
good thing. He's a follower of Gautama Buddha. That
is, suffering is inherent in life and that one can be
liberated from it by mental and moral
self-purification (solving progamming and related
techincal problems).
> One on the coolest things about it is you design in
> the Swing GUI and when
> you build it generates the SQL scripts, DO, and
> BDOs.
>
Way cool stuff. And exactly the way to do things.
With this new light, I will post a separate message
giving a status of what's done in OPL, and what might
be useful to add.
> While your there, take a look at XMLC. Also really
> cool! I was thinking
> that
> it may be kinda nice as another alternative under
> Turbine. It would also
> help address anyones need tor converting existing
> HTML into HTML classes for
> use inside Turbine.
Dave, my advise is to forget all these template
solutions that aren't XSL. Have you tried XSL? It's
incredible.
With XSL, you don't need to waste valuable O-O
programming resources on html implementation. You can
give the job to someone else.
You should read the docs at apache's cocoon site. It
fully explains the business and technical issues that
will make XSL steamroll over all these other template
panty wastes.
Now, since I can't get to Speaker's Corner in Hyde
Parks, here's my soabox:
However, I agree with Stefano Mazzocchi that this
technology will move to the browser client. Microsoft
IE has support for XSL transformations; however, the
standard was too experimental and incomplete at the
time, so it's a toy. But, surely, IE will soon have
this, because it's something of a java killer for
them.
Netscape, a.k.a. Mozilla, will put support in theirs.
Unfortunately for all, the're floundering in producing
a product before the market totally evaporates for
them.
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