My approach is simple yet highly efficient (from my point of view) I use
Eclipse as a graphical editor and the built in Ant view and an Ant
script for automating the inter wsdl2java generation, copying business
logic into the generated framework, compiling it and then deploy it.

Ohh and I edit my WSDLs by hand in the Eclipse text editor mode of the
WSDL editor. Not exactly the most efficient way, but I found XMLspy
license too costly for adding a graphical WSDL editor (only available in
the Enterprise license, not the professional one).

I can (and have to the Muse staff) share a rough draft of a test
project.

/Lenni

-----Original Message-----
From: Nelson Kotowski [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: 29 November 2007 10:05
To: [email protected]
Subject: Programming Environment

Hello Everyone,

Back then, just a little help...

What is the environment you use to develop WSRF applications within
Muse?
It's not a poll, it's just that i was used working with Eclipse to
develop
Java Apps, but now i couldn't find any plugin or good IDE to work with
all
this WSDL, XML, SOA ...

I tried Eclipse WTP, didn't like it, and now i am checking NetBeans, but
maybe you already made this choice and could help. Or do you all use
text
editors only?

My goal is to develop a WSRF-compliant service with backend in Java -
the
usual :) .

Best regards,
Nelson P Kotowski Filho.

---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to