Fully agree with Thomas.  
Although Parsley will not evolve anymore from its creator, it's very mature and 
capable, almost bug free, and it's very extensible:
- either from native documented extension points
- with directly by modifying the source.

So it may be overkill for small projects, but it really shines on complex or 
large projects.
I also used it on Mobile Flex (using the FastInject feature) with little 
performance degradation.

Regards,

Maurice 

-----Message d'origine-----
De : Frédéric Thomas [mailto:[email protected]] 
Envoyé : vendredi 26 juillet 2013 10:55
À : [email protected]
Objet : Re: MVC framework

Hi,

Just to be clear even though Parsley is not maintain anymore by its original 
creator, it's up to individuals to add new feature as they like, it's the more 
complete and well design IOC / MVC framework I used out there, it has 
everything you need out of the box and probably more, that's the point, 
depending of your project complexity, you maybe won't need all its 
capabilities, in this case, a lighter and easier to learn framework will 
probably fit your needs as Swiz, Roboleg, Urania or even a custom one.

-Fred

-----Message d'origine----- 
From: Ajar
Sent: Friday, July 26, 2013 10:23 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: MVC framework

dude - Parsley is discontinued, you can checkout the news section on their
site.
RobotLegs on the other hand is alive and kicking!
Great supportive community, and you'll pick it up on a weekend.
well, i'm biased - it's my ultimate favorite :)


On Fri, Jul 26, 2013 at 9:05 AM, Justin Mclean 
<[email protected]>wrote:

> Hi,
>
> > How can I realize an MVC like architecture by using Flex/AS3 only. Are
> there any examples out there?
>
> Basically AS classes for your model, loosely coupled MXML component
> dispatching events for your views, data binding on the model to update
> views and your application or an event bus as your application, add a but
> of structure and discipline and it's a simple, easy to understand, 
> scalable
> (to a reasonable size), flexible, non prescriptive MVC suitable for a lot
> of jobs.
>
> Think I have a simple application lying about that does this (from my
> frameworks are evil talk?), I'll see if I can find it.
>
> Thanks,
> Justin 

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