Hi Ralph,
The short answer is: yes.
The long answer is: you can do that with existing web application
frameworks already. It's much easier than doing that with MINA. I'd
suggest the following frameworks:
* Seam framework
* Spring framework
* WebWork
HTH,
PS: Please don't contact me directly. Please use the MINA mailing list
instead.
On Thu, 05 Jun 2008 00:31:42 +0900, Ralph Owens
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi Trustin,
I've been looking at a more simple way of creating web apps. It seems
to me that the current strategy of HTML, jsp, js, asp, and xml
intermixed with java, cold fusion, .net, etc. with a bit of IIS and/or
Apache is extremely difficult, hard to use and more than a bit hoaky!
What I've been exploring is a strategy to make a web app that is totally
driven by Java. When the Java needs to do I/O, it pumps out a stream of
HTML to the remote browser. When the remote browser responds, the POJO
is listening and continues with the app.
I've just stumbled onto MINA and from what I've read, it seems like it
would be 50% or more of what I'd need to do to follow this strategy.
My question is: Can MINA read from and write to a remote browser? If
so, then my interpretation of what I'm reading is accurate.
Thanks for the answer.
-Ralph Owens
--
Trustin Lee - Principal Software Engineer, JBoss, Red Hat
--
what we call human nature is actually human habit
--
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