Andreas,
wait a second:
> I mean no memory leaks in the VM
Memory leaks ? I've got applications in operation for months without having a single
hiccup... aren't you confusing the Servlet
container (say, a buggy verisone of Tomcat) with Cocoon ?
> no complicated superlong configration files
That's the con side of flexibility: I hate those GUI-based administration tools that
don't allow you to do much.
> no VM restarting for debugging
Hmm.... I never restart the Servlet container (not the VM) for debugging: could you
please explain ?
Regards,
---------------------------------------------
Luca Morandini
GIS Consultant
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://utenti.tripod.it/lmorandini/index.html
---------------------------------------------
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Andreas Bednarz [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Thursday, January 23, 2003 3:30 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: .Net port of Cocoon
>
>
> Hi Derek,
>
> thank you very much for your comment. Yes, it is all true and I am not a
> friend of MS closed sources in any way. We know Java very well but you
> hardly get peoply who can do the real thinks with Cocoon and can develop
> a real application ... not just some test cases and handler forms. In
> thins case a .NET application would not be easier to handle too, but
> maybe there is some company who can provide a Cocoon Clone which is as
> easy to use as PHP. I mean no memory leaks in the VM, no complicated
> superlong configration files, no VM restarting for debugging etc
>
> Andreas Bednarz, Germany
>
>
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