On Wed, 22 Sep 2010 14:19:17 +, Sam Stainsby wrote:
On Wed, 22 Sep 2010 15:34:15 +0200, Erik van Oosten wrote:
I have looked at the example and it looks very promising.
However, if you want more attention there should at the absolute
minimum be a bunch of links somewhere that give
You could still have couchdb as a database, and also there is the
beginnings of an object store layer tucked away in an experimental API,
but I think we will stick with DB4O for the primary database. Once you
see the ease with which you can store use DB4O, you will see why eg (in
Scala sorry):
You could abstract the datastore in the stack using JDO/DataNucleus. It
supports DB40. In fact as it also supports RDBMS you could easily create
a datastore agnostic Wicket/Scala stack - that would be most awesome!
Just as a side note:
there is/was an mini example with warp persist which
Looks great, thanks for the link.
+1 on CouchDB, et al vs only DB4o,
Wicket+Scala+Couch is a really nice stack
Thanks
On 9/21/10 11:42 PM, Thomas Kappler wrote:
On 09/22/10 03:41, Sam Stainsby wrote:
Today we officially announced our project to provide a Wicket-DB4O-Scala
web application
On 09/22/10 03:41, Sam Stainsby wrote:
Today we officially announced our project to provide a Wicket-DB4O-Scala
web application stack:
http://sustainablesoftware.com.au/blog/?p=77
I’m pleased to announce a new web application framework, called Granite,
and an associated set of reusable
I have looked at the example and it looks very promising.
However, if you want more attention there should at the absolute minimum
be a bunch of links somewhere that give starting points for someone to
understand the project. E.g. links to important classes, important
examples. Either an
On Wed, 22 Sep 2010 08:42:20 +0200, Thomas Kappler wrote:
On 09/22/10 03:41, Sam Stainsby wrote:
Today we officially announced our project to provide a
Wicket-DB4O-Scala web application stack:
Now that you've done the hard work of fitting a non-relational store
into a Wicket-based
On Wed, 22 Sep 2010 15:34:15 +0200, Erik van Oosten wrote:
I have looked at the example and it looks very promising.
However, if you want more attention there should at the absolute minimum
be a bunch of links somewhere that give starting points for someone to
understand the project. E.g.
...@sustainablesoftware.com.au]
Sent: Thursday, 23 September 2010 12:06 AM
To: users@wicket.apache.org
Subject: Re: announcing Granite - a Wicket-Scala-DB4O web application
stack
On Wed, 22 Sep 2010 08:42:20 +0200, Thomas Kappler wrote:
On 09/22/10 03:41, Sam Stainsby wrote:
Today we officially announced our project
On Thu, 23 Sep 2010 04:47:24 +1000, Chris Colman wrote:
You could abstract the datastore in the stack using JDO/DataNucleus. It
supports DB40. In fact as it also supports RDBMS you could easily create
a datastore agnostic Wicket/Scala stack - that would be most awesome!
That's one path that
Today we officially announced our project to provide a Wicket-DB4O-Scala
web application stack:
http://sustainablesoftware.com.au/blog/?p=77
I’m pleased to announce a new web application framework, called Granite,
and an associated set of reusable libraries, called Uniscala. Please note
that
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