before we are going to process, I could get a conviction from yours that the 
thrift is already matured library. 

thanks for all your comments.

On Jan 15, 2014, at 1:59 AM, Jens Geyer <[email protected]> wrote:

> Amen to the swiss army knife!
> ________________________________
> Von: Rush Manbert
> Gesendet: 14.01.2014 17:21
> An: [email protected]
> Betreff: Re: any recommendable open-sources for c++ developers
> 
> We use Thrift in both C++ and Java on Mac and Windows. Servers are Mac/Java, 
> clients are Mac/Windows/C++. It all works very well. We also use C++ Thrift 
> clients and servers within the client side machines and internally between 
> server components. We even SWIG Thrift-based client side libraries for use by 
> the server side code. And we also use it to "flatten" structures into buffers 
> and files.
> 
> It is easy to write your own transports and protocols as extensions of the 
> originals. It is easy to modify the code generator.
> 
> As I have said to a number of people, Thrift is the Swiss Army Knife of 
> software.
> 
> - Rush
> 
> On Jan 13, 2014, at 5:49 PM, henry.jykim@google wrote:
> 
>> hi, all
>> I am newbie to use the thrift library.
>> 
>> Our team’s legacy software is using CORBA very heavily.
>> yes, we got now the time to change it for more lighter, more faster.
>> 
>> There are 2 big libraries for bmt.
>> the first is ICE.
>> the second is THRIFT.
>> 
>> AYK, there are good and worse relatively.
>> 
>> I believe that the thrift is used very nicely in JAVA world. however does it 
>> be also used in C++ world?
>> does anybody be able to recommend good use-cases?
>> 
>> very thanks for your concerns.
> 

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