You could start here:

http://appfuse.org/display/APF/Tutorials

Pick a place to start.  And like the other guy said, take a course.

There are also other online tutorials and guides.

On 9/29/07, meisam4910 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> ou know John what my big problem is? the big problem is that for example
> after what u said i go for the appfuse (for the backbone) and Struts or
> Spring for learning, the first tutorial i face i find out there many
> concepts i have no idea about, then i feel badly frustrated. for example
> right now i have opened this page:
> http://struts.apache.org/2.x/docs/tutorials.html
> there are plenty of terms i have just heard of them but not worked with
> them, if i want to go and learn them it will take a long time, may be im
> not
> right but the terms like maven, xml properties, ...beans, CRUD and...are
> bothering me, thats why i give it up and ...
> do u have any idea over this problem ? you may say go and learn one by
> one,
> i would say sure i will, BUT..from where i need to start? which one of
> those
> topics i need to go first for ? hibernate ? beans? controllers ? mvc ?..i
> have ead so many things about these terms but still have not felt them by
> my
> own, i have not done any real world project with them. would you put them
> all in steps for me and the tell me the priorities ?
>
>
> John Kwon wrote:
> >
> > It's good to continue to use any and all of them as long as the need
> > arises.
> >
> > You're going to be doing more than one project in your life - probably
> > more
> > than one in the next couple of years.  Some start a project nearly every
> > month.  So AppFuse is handy to use.
> >
> > Struts and Spring are both good to know - and it's easier to set up one
> of
> > those using AppFuse than trying to do it manually.
> >
> > And, like all things software development related, things are changing
> > fast.  Pick a direction and keep learning as rapidly as possible,
> because
> > everything changes.
> >
> > Look at the history of the original Struts, and what it's become now -
> or
> > AppFuse - it's older versions differ substantially from the current
> > version.
> >
> > Core concepts don't change - how we wrap them, architect them, and
> > implement
> > them changes every day.
> >
> > One might argue that J2EE (as diagrammed by Sun on their original J2EE
> > documentation) was nothing more than a grand implementation of CICS.
> > Transactional page interaction with persistence transactions back on the
> > server.  We might see web services as the modern implementation of CICS
> > transactions.  While the implementation has radically changed, the core
> > concept of interfacing with transactions has not changed in decades.
> >
> > Learn all you can, don't be afraid to learn something new or extra, and
> > keep
> > the core concepts close to you.
> >
> > On 9/29/07, meisam4910 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >> is it good to continue using appfuse or isn`t better to learn about
> >> Struts
> >> or
> >> Spring ? I mean to learn them fully and build our projects based on
> them
> >> ?
> >> or can we count on appfuse forever and use appfuse always ?
> >> --
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> >> Sent from the AppFuse - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
> >>
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> >>
> >
> >
>
> --
> View this message in context:
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