+1 also to Frank's suggestions, although I realize he was not ready to
cash in the ticket yet.  On the whole, I like his no nonsense and
non-convoluted approach to these problems.  That is what I liked about
Struts from the beginning.  The present course is not clear.  Nor is
there any perceived need to make it clear, I think.  I suspect Frank
will do what we all must do at this point.  Just code and don't pay
attention to all the flak.

Jack

On 4/19/05, Shihgian Lee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > What you demonstrate here I would also argue is worse for page authors,
> > who now have to be concerned with script writing as well as layout of
> > simple HTML tags.  You can argue that a page author would know
> > Javascript as well, and you may be right in most cases, but the idea
> > that everyone seems to be pushing is that the page authors should really
> > be glorified graphics artists who just do markup and worry about layout,
> > not code.  That doesn't jive, to me at least, with the example you post.
> 
> +1. I agree with Frank's point of view over Martin's. Usually in a
> larger organization, you have to work with different groups of people
> with different roles i.e. page authors/UI experts. Page authors/UI
> experts don't have to know about scripting and just focus on page
> layouts or usabilities. If you are in a smaller organization where one
> person does it all, then that is fine. Frank's proposal adds great
> values in the organization I am working in.
> 
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-- 
"You can lead a horse to water but you cannot make it float on its back."
~Dakota Jack~

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