Dennis Kempin wrote:
Hello Ortwin,
* You mention "problems with JSP". What are they?
At first I tried to use JSP without any framework or taglib.
As you are coming from PHP that approach seems somehow natural, but of
course is totally wrong.
> In
contrast to templates JSP doesn't help m
J. Bergman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Jakarta General List"
Sent: Tuesday, January 10, 2006 12:11 PM
Subject: RE: comments on a project
At first I tried to use JSP without any framework or taglib. In
contrast to templates JSP doesn't help much on seperating logic
and html c
> At first I tried to use JSP without any framework or taglib. In
> contrast to templates JSP doesn't help much on seperating logic
> and html code
Please see the JSP 2.0 Specification for Tag Files. Tags are your friends,
and Tag Files make them easy to write.
> And I could not get used to the
Hello Ortwin,
* You mention "problems with JSP". What are they?
At first I tried to use JSP without any framework or taglib. In contrast
to templates JSP doesn't help much on seperating logic and html code,
because you still need comparatively much code to iterate over Lists, or
print out s
Dennis,
I don't want to discourage you. But I fail to see any of the following:
* You mention "problems with JSP". What are they?
* Which frameworks do you mean and what's the problem with them?
* What does you framework make better?
* Why do you invent a proprietary XML scripting facility? JSTL
Hello,
I had been programming dynamic Websites with PHP the last few years until
I discovered Java, and all its advantages. But I had many problems
migrating to JSP, and tried many frameworks until I gave up and created an
own framework, that is easy to use even for ex-PHP developer (Target