Hi,
>> Dang..I have to say, that was WELL put. I responded with what I
>> figured was why JSP is superior, and you blew my response right
>> off the map! :)
>
>:-)
hehe..sorry Jason, no offense to you. I was laughing at what the guy had to
say to you. I did think he said it good though..far better than I did. He
was a bit sarcastic in his response like he was attacking you..but still.
He had some pretty good points.
>
>> I think J2EE is a "bigger" reason than others to use JSP.
>
>Interesting. It doesn't really effect my decision since I just bundle
>the webmacro.jar file with my app and it's available everywhere I need.
Good point. I have to admit, I am not sure how webmacro works, so that was
a bad comment..well, in the sense that I didnt know how web macro works.
>Techniques for content creation on top of servlets are the hot area
>right now. I'd like to see a good exchange of ideas on this front,
>not a blind following of JSP.
Agreed. Competition is good. I just think since JSP is part of the plan for
J2EE and supports the write once run anywhere, including the nice .war file
where you can jar up a whole web dir and move it to any platform..that JSP
is the way to go.
Speaking as a Java engineer, I tend to think JSP is easier. But, I can see
from a non-java engineer, even just a web content developer, that WebMacro
could equally be appealing.
Kevin Duffey
Software Engineer
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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