I'd say getting everything set up is what hurts, after that, it is very
nice. I'm running Struts 2 with JPA and Toplink and I'm quite pleased.

musachy

On 5/11/07, Rick Schumeyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

The funny thing is that I've spend the past few months working with
RoR.  I like it, but I finally have some time to investigate the Java
world.  I have this nagging concern about RoR performance.

One thing I hope to learn soon is, once over the pain of initial
configuration with Java based frameworks, how hard is it to add another
class, view, etc.

String Larson wrote:
> That's what we're using as well.
> Plus using EJB3/Annotations (over Hibernate3) for persistence.
> Works well. No show stoppers thus far.
>
> If don't expect your web app to be too complex, I'd recommend a hard
> look at Ruby on Rails.
> The whole S2, Spring, Hibernate thing is very powerful. However, it is
> getting too
> bulky w/configuration and dependencies for less complex projects.
>
>
> On May 11, 2007, at 4:29 PM, Josh Vickery wrote:
>
>> Spring has several components, but the one I use (and the one I think
>> is the most popular) is the Inversion of Control (IOC) framework.
>> Struts 2 (when it was Web Work) had some IOC support, but it wasn't as
>> full featured as what Spring offers.
>>
>> Spring also has an MVC, which is a direct competitor to Struts 2.  I
>> personally don't like Spring MVC, and would much rather use Struts 2.
>>
>> Josh
>>
>> On 5/11/07, Rick Schumeyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>> Let me ask you a question that I've never really received a good
answer
>>> to.  Keep in mind that my knowledge of Java web programming is some
S1,
>>> and just starting with S2.  I have never really looked at Spring.
>>>
>>> I understand that S2 and Spring somehow work together.  What I don't
>>> understand is: why would I want to use both of them?  If Spring is so
>>> great, why don't I just buy a copy of Spring in Action and forget
about
>>> S2?
>>>
>>> I guess I'm looking for answer to: what problem does Spring solve that
>>> S2 does not?  And vice-versa.
>>>
>>> Musachy Barroso wrote:
>>> > Have you tried using Spring?. It plays nicely with Struts and
>>> hibernate,
>>> > plus there are some examples around I think.
>>> >
>>> > musachy
>>> >
>>> > On 5/11/07, Rick Schumeyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>> >>
>>> >> Now I'm trying to configure Hibernate with S2, which many others
>>> have
>>> >> done.  I was trying to follow the example in WebWork in Action, but
>>> >> things have obviously changed since then.
>>> >>
>>> >> To be clear, the problem is to create a SessionFactory once in
>>> such a
>>> >> way that all my actions can easily have access to it.  The
>>> approach in
>>> >> WWiA uses IoC.  As far as I know, it would work in S2 but would
need
>>> >> many modifications because package names have changed.  And perhaps
>>> >> other mods would be needed?
>>> >>
>>> >> I'm not sure if the best approach is:
>>> >>
>>> >> a) Use the strategy in WWiA, but change the import statements to
>>> match
>>> >> the current jars (and perhaps make other changes to match S2)
>>> >>
>>> >> or
>>> >>
>>> >> b) Something else.
>>> >>
>>> >> Perhaps someone could point me to a complete solution?
>>> >>
>>> >>
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>>> >
>>> >
>>>
>>>
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