If you want to do "pure java", also have a look at Apache Wicket.

Maarten

On Wed, Jun 4, 2008 at 5:33 PM, 이희승 (Trustin Lee) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 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
> --
> http://gleamynode.net/
>

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