Thanks Greg

2011/2/2 Greg Brown <[email protected]>

> It is certainly possible to use Spring and Hibernate in a Pivot application
> - however, it may not produce the best architectural design. These libraries
> are generally designed to be used on the server, whereas Pivot code runs on
> the client. You may be better off using Pivot's web query classes to call
> into Spring/Hibernate-based services provided by a server.
>
> On Feb 2, 2011, at 4:50 AM, Salvador Benimeli wrote:
>
> > I just started learning about Pivot but I am a bit confuse about using it
> . My question is: how does Pivot integrates with other java frameworks? For
> example, is it possible to use Pivot with the spring security framework  to
> provide authentication and access control ? Is it easy to integrate with
> Hibernate ?
> >
> > I ask these questions because I was planning to build a web application
> with tapestry but I like more the user interface that is possible to built
> with Pivot. I would like to built that application completely in Pivot like
> a desktop application but is not clear to me if I could use for example the
> spring security framework to provide user authentication and access control.
> >
> > Thanks in advance
>
>

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