Re: DZone's 40th Refcardz, Apache Tapestry 5.0

2009-02-05 Thread Michael Gerzabek

Awesome! Thank you Howard!


Lewis Ship schrieb:


DZone Refcardz  are a series of free cheat 
sheets for developers, written by book authors and industry experts on 
a wide range of technical topics including: Spring, Windows 
PowerShell, EJB 3, Ajax, Design Patterns, Silverlight 2 and many more. 
With new releases weekly, check them out today and download them all! 

If you think this is useful, we would be honored if you could post a 
mention about this great resource to share with your peers (feel free 
to use images in this email or from our website).


Subscribe Today! See why Refcardz have been downloaded over a quarter 
of a million times!  

--
Howard Lewis Ship
Creator: Apache Tapestry and Apache HiveMind




-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org



Re: DZone's 40th Refcardz, Apache Tapestry 5.0

2009-02-05 Thread Howard Lewis Ship
Yes, they may switch it over to the Alexander's book.

On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 12:16 PM, Kevin Menard  wrote:
> Looks pretty good.  Although, I'm a bit baffled by the TiA plug.  It
> is a bit antiquated now.
>
> --
> Kevin
>
>
>
> On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 10:44 AM, Howard Lewis Ship  wrote:
>>
>> DZone Refcardz are a series of free cheat sheets for developers, written by
>> book authors and industry experts on a wide range of technical topics
>> including: Spring, Windows PowerShell, EJB 3, Ajax, Design Patterns,
>> Silverlight 2 and many more. With new releases weekly, check them out today
>> and download them all!
>> If you think this is useful, we would be honored if you could post a mention
>> about this great resource to share with your peers (feel free to use images
>> in this email or from our website).
>> Subscribe Today! See why Refcardz have been downloaded over a quarter of a
>> million times!
>> --
>> Howard Lewis Ship
>> Creator: Apache Tapestry and Apache HiveMind
>>
>
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org
>
>



-- 
Howard M. Lewis Ship

Creator Apache Tapestry and Apache HiveMind

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org



Re: DZone's 40th Refcardz, Apache Tapestry 5.0

2009-02-05 Thread Kevin Menard
Looks pretty good.  Although, I'm a bit baffled by the TiA plug.  It
is a bit antiquated now.

-- 
Kevin



On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 10:44 AM, Howard Lewis Ship  wrote:
>
> DZone Refcardz are a series of free cheat sheets for developers, written by
> book authors and industry experts on a wide range of technical topics
> including: Spring, Windows PowerShell, EJB 3, Ajax, Design Patterns,
> Silverlight 2 and many more. With new releases weekly, check them out today
> and download them all!
> If you think this is useful, we would be honored if you could post a mention
> about this great resource to share with your peers (feel free to use images
> in this email or from our website).
> Subscribe Today! See why Refcardz have been downloaded over a quarter of a
> million times!
> --
> Howard Lewis Ship
> Creator: Apache Tapestry and Apache HiveMind
>

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org



Re: DZone's 40th Refcardz, Apache Tapestry 5.0

2009-02-05 Thread Francois Armand

Howard Lewis Ship wrote:


DZone Refcardz  are a series of free cheat 
sheets for developers, written by book authors and industry experts on 
a wide range of technical topics including: Spring, Windows 
PowerShell, EJB 3, Ajax, Design Patterns, Silverlight 2 and many more. 
With new releases weekly, check them out today and download them all! 

[...]


That's really cool, the RefCardz is quite good, and it should have been 
a rather complex task: describing all the cool features of T5 in 6 pages 
max :)

Just... There is no mention to onActivate/onPassivate ?
Well, I think that this one is more "new user oriented". The next one 
should focus on really hot tips, IoC, AJAX, existing pipelines, well, 
all the beautiful architecture internals of T5 :)



--
Francois Armand
Etudes & Développements J2EE
Groupe Linagora - http://www.linagora.com
Tél.: +33 (0)1 58 18 68 28
---
http://fanf42.blogspot.com
InterLDAP - http://interldap.org 
FederID - http://www.federid.org/

Open Source identities management and federation


-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org



Re: Is it possible to use Property Files with HTML tags in Tapestry 5.0

2009-01-06 Thread hemen

Thanks Armand...

  :jumping:
  Its working very fine...
   With : 


Hemen.. 



Francois Armand wrote:
> 
> hemen wrote:
>> 
>> It will print the "hi this is demo property file.. please refer
>> Home". --- As whole String
>> with
>> HTML tags
>>
>> HTML parsing is not done
>>   
> In fact, Tapestry escaped the armful characters to avoid any damaging 
> side effects. If you actually want to output your string as it is, you 
> will to use  the outputraw component:
> http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/tapestry-core/ref/org/apache/tapestry5/corelib/components/OutputRaw.html
> 
> -- 
> Francois Armand
> Etudes & Développements J2EE
> Groupe Linagora - http://www.linagora.com
> Tél.: +33 (0)1 58 18 68 28
> ---
> http://fanf42.blogspot.com
> InterLDAP - http://interldap.org 
> FederID - http://www.federid.org/
> Open Source identities management and federation
> 
> 
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org
> 
> 
> 

-- 
View this message in context: 
http://www.nabble.com/Is-it-possible-to-use-Property-Files-with-HTML-tags-in-Tapestry-5.0-tp21308001p21308555.html
Sent from the Tapestry - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.


-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org



Re: Is it possible to use Property Files with HTML tags in Tapestry 5.0

2009-01-06 Thread Francois Armand

hemen wrote:


It will print the "hi this is demo property file.. please refer
Home". --- As whole String with
HTML tags

HTML parsing is not done
  
In fact, Tapestry escaped the armful characters to avoid any damaging 
side effects. If you actually want to output your string as it is, you 
will to use  the outputraw component:

http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/tapestry-core/ref/org/apache/tapestry5/corelib/components/OutputRaw.html

--
Francois Armand
Etudes & Développements J2EE
Groupe Linagora - http://www.linagora.com
Tél.: +33 (0)1 58 18 68 28
---
http://fanf42.blogspot.com
InterLDAP - http://interldap.org 
FederID - http://www.federid.org/

Open Source identities management and federation


-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org



Is it possible to use Property Files with HTML tags in Tapestry 5.0

2009-01-06 Thread hemen

I am using example.properties file in which, the following property is using

Property1=hi this is demo property file.. please refer Home

In example.tml file
when i print it as 

${Property1}

It will print the "hi this is demo property file.. please refer
Home". --- As whole String with
HTML tags

HTML parsing is not done

Please suggest me

Thanks,
Hemen
-- 
View this message in context: 
http://www.nabble.com/Is-it-possible-to-use-Property-Files-with-HTML-tags-in-Tapestry-5.0-tp21308001p21308001.html
Sent from the Tapestry - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.


-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org



Re: Tapestry 5.0 Final Release - 5.0.18

2008-12-16 Thread Igor Drobiazko
Howard, why don't you post this annoncement at TSS and/or InfoQ?
The whole world should know that competitor frameworks will die hard :)

On Fri, Dec 12, 2008 at 7:52 PM, Howard Lewis Ship  wrote:

> Apache Tapestry 5.0 final release (5.0.18)
>
> After nearly three years of development, the final release of Apache
> Tapestry 5.0 is now available for download.
>
> Apache Tapestry 5 is a total rewrite of the Tapestry web application
> framework, bringing forward Tapestry's core concepts: reusable
> components, true encapsulation, readable templates, well thought-out
> localization/internationalization, and easy management of server-side
> state.
>
> Tapestry 5 builds on top of this with a host of new features:
>
> * True POJO component classes: no base classes to extend, no
>  interfaces to implement.
>
> * Live class reloading: no need to redeploy to see code changes.
>
> * XML templates with namespaces.
>
> * Minimal configuration via naming conventions and annotations.
>
> * Integrated Ajax support, built on top of Prototype and
>  Scriptaculous.
>
> * Automatic client-side form input validation.
>
> * High performance via pooled objects (and by avoiding the use of
>  reflection).
>
> * Automatic REST-style URLs.
>
> * Built-in integration with Hibernate and Spring.
>
> * Best-of-breed exception reporting.
>
> * Built-in extensible mega-components: BeanEditForm, BeanDisplay and
>  Grid (to edit and display any JavaBean or collection of JavaBeans).
>
> Tapestry organizes your application into pages, and components within
> pages; pages and components are ordinary POJOs: not singletons (like
> servlets). Tapestry combines pages, page templates, components,
> component templates, and other resources together for you, managing
> server-side state, the creation of URLs and the dispatch of incoming
> requests. You build your application in terms of the methods and
> properties of your objects, not in terms of URLs or the Servlet API.
>
> Tapestry features great exception reporting to keep you on track, and
> live class reloading to keep you agile.  Tapestry templates are XML
> documents, using a namespace for Tapestry-specific elements. Tapestry
> is designed to be easy to develop, using any standard IDE with an XML
> editor.
>
> Tapestry is simple, sensible and fun. It keeps you productive by
> freeing you from the boring, mechanical aspects of web application
> development. You can stay focused on what makes your application
> interesting and unique, and let Tapestry handle all the ugly plumbing.
>
> Tapestry is made available under the Apache Software License 2.0.
> Tapestry is free to download, free to use, free to redistribute and
> free to modify.
>
> Tapestry 5.0.18
>
> * Project page: http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/
>
> * Download: http://tapestry.apache.org/download.html
>
> * Release Notes:
>  http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/release-notes.html
>
> * Upgrade Notes: http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/upgrade.html
>
> * Via Maven:
>
>
>org.apache.tapestry
>tapestry-core
>5.0.18
>
>
>
>
> --
> Howard M. Lewis Ship
>
> Creator Apache Tapestry and Apache HiveMind
>
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org
>
>


-- 
Best regards,

Igor Drobiazko


Re: Tapestry 5.0 Final Release - 5.0.18

2008-12-15 Thread Borut Bolčina
Great news!

Knowing this framework is in production use for months now, is there a list
of success stories? I think Howard once asked on this list for such stories
and the format in which they should be "reported".

Cheers,
Borut


Re: Tapestry 5.0 Final Release - 5.0.18

2008-12-15 Thread Stephane Decleire
Congratulations Howard and all contributors for making our lives as web
developpers, architects, project managers, ... easier !

Best Regards

Stephane

Howard Lewis Ship a écrit :
> Apache Tapestry 5.0 final release (5.0.18)
>
> After nearly three years of development, the final release of Apache
> Tapestry 5.0 is now available for download.
>
> Apache Tapestry 5 is a total rewrite of the Tapestry web application
> framework, bringing forward Tapestry's core concepts: reusable
> components, true encapsulation, readable templates, well thought-out
> localization/internationalization, and easy management of server-side
> state.
>
> Tapestry 5 builds on top of this with a host of new features:
>
> * True POJO component classes: no base classes to extend, no
>   interfaces to implement.
>
> * Live class reloading: no need to redeploy to see code changes.
>
> * XML templates with namespaces.
>
> * Minimal configuration via naming conventions and annotations.
>
> * Integrated Ajax support, built on top of Prototype and
>   Scriptaculous.
>
> * Automatic client-side form input validation.
>
> * High performance via pooled objects (and by avoiding the use of
>   reflection).
>
> * Automatic REST-style URLs.
>
> * Built-in integration with Hibernate and Spring.
>
> * Best-of-breed exception reporting.
>
> * Built-in extensible mega-components: BeanEditForm, BeanDisplay and
>   Grid (to edit and display any JavaBean or collection of JavaBeans).
>
> Tapestry organizes your application into pages, and components within
> pages; pages and components are ordinary POJOs: not singletons (like
> servlets). Tapestry combines pages, page templates, components,
> component templates, and other resources together for you, managing
> server-side state, the creation of URLs and the dispatch of incoming
> requests. You build your application in terms of the methods and
> properties of your objects, not in terms of URLs or the Servlet API.
>
> Tapestry features great exception reporting to keep you on track, and
> live class reloading to keep you agile.  Tapestry templates are XML
> documents, using a namespace for Tapestry-specific elements. Tapestry
> is designed to be easy to develop, using any standard IDE with an XML
> editor.
>
> Tapestry is simple, sensible and fun. It keeps you productive by
> freeing you from the boring, mechanical aspects of web application
> development. You can stay focused on what makes your application
> interesting and unique, and let Tapestry handle all the ugly plumbing.
>
> Tapestry is made available under the Apache Software License 2.0.
> Tapestry is free to download, free to use, free to redistribute and
> free to modify.
>
> Tapestry 5.0.18
>
> * Project page: http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/
>
> * Download: http://tapestry.apache.org/download.html
>
> * Release Notes:
>   http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/release-notes.html
>
> * Upgrade Notes: http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/upgrade.html
>
> * Via Maven:
>
> 
> org.apache.tapestry
>   tapestry-core
>   5.0.18
> 
>
>
>
>   


Re: Tapestry 5.0 Final Release - 5.0.18

2008-12-15 Thread Massimo Lusetti
On Mon, Dec 15, 2008 at 10:03 AM, Olle Hallin  wrote:

> Congrats Howard (and others who have contributed)!

Yep, congratulation Howard, you did an amazing job!

> Just a naming question: wouldn't it be appropriate to name the release
> version something in line with 5.0.GA?
> It will clarify the release status of the version, considering the line of
> versions preceding it (5.0.1, 5.0.2, ...)

About naming i like the version as is, no GA is needed for marking
this release as GA, just a note on the home page is enough.

Anyway is still a great release!

-- 
Massimo
http://meridio.blogspot.com

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org



Re: Tapestry 5.0 Final Release - 5.0.18

2008-12-15 Thread Olle Hallin
Congrats Howard (and others who have contributed)!

Just a naming question: wouldn't it be appropriate to name the release
version something in line with 5.0.GA?
It will clarify the release status of the version, considering the line of
versions preceding it (5.0.1, 5.0.2, ...)

Just my 2c.

Olle


2008/12/15 Michael Gerzabek 

> Thank you Howard and Team!
>
> This is really a great piece of software. In my humble opinion it's the
> best web application framework available. Development is straight forward,
> though you have to learn the Tapestry way of doing things. But that's also
> true for any other framework out in space.
>
> Special thanks also to the list for coaching people on the usage of T5.
> This is a big help in acquiring the knowledge to use T5 effectively.
>
> Michael
>
> Howard Lewis Ship schrieb:
>
>  Apache Tapestry 5.0 final release (5.0.18)
>>
>> After nearly three years of development, the final release of Apache
>> Tapestry 5.0 is now available for download.
>>
>> Apache Tapestry 5 is a total rewrite of the Tapestry web application
>> framework, bringing forward Tapestry's core concepts: reusable
>> components, true encapsulation, readable templates, well thought-out
>> localization/internationalization, and easy management of server-side
>> state.
>>
>> Tapestry 5 builds on top of this with a host of new features:
>>
>> * True POJO component classes: no base classes to extend, no
>>  interfaces to implement.
>>
>> * Live class reloading: no need to redeploy to see code changes.
>>
>> * XML templates with namespaces.
>>
>> * Minimal configuration via naming conventions and annotations.
>>
>> * Integrated Ajax support, built on top of Prototype and
>>  Scriptaculous.
>>
>> * Automatic client-side form input validation.
>>
>> * High performance via pooled objects (and by avoiding the use of
>>  reflection).
>>
>> * Automatic REST-style URLs.
>>
>> * Built-in integration with Hibernate and Spring.
>>
>> * Best-of-breed exception reporting.
>>
>> * Built-in extensible mega-components: BeanEditForm, BeanDisplay and
>>  Grid (to edit and display any JavaBean or collection of JavaBeans).
>>
>> Tapestry organizes your application into pages, and components within
>> pages; pages and components are ordinary POJOs: not singletons (like
>> servlets). Tapestry combines pages, page templates, components,
>> component templates, and other resources together for you, managing
>> server-side state, the creation of URLs and the dispatch of incoming
>> requests. You build your application in terms of the methods and
>> properties of your objects, not in terms of URLs or the Servlet API.
>>
>> Tapestry features great exception reporting to keep you on track, and
>> live class reloading to keep you agile.  Tapestry templates are XML
>> documents, using a namespace for Tapestry-specific elements. Tapestry
>> is designed to be easy to develop, using any standard IDE with an XML
>> editor.
>>
>> Tapestry is simple, sensible and fun. It keeps you productive by
>> freeing you from the boring, mechanical aspects of web application
>> development. You can stay focused on what makes your application
>> interesting and unique, and let Tapestry handle all the ugly plumbing.
>>
>> Tapestry is made available under the Apache Software License 2.0.
>> Tapestry is free to download, free to use, free to redistribute and
>> free to modify.
>>
>> Tapestry 5.0.18
>>
>> * Project page: http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/
>>
>> * Download: http://tapestry.apache.org/download.html
>>
>> * Release Notes:
>>  http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/release-notes.html
>>
>> * Upgrade Notes: http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/upgrade.html
>>
>> * Via Maven:
>>
>>
>>org.apache.tapestry
>>tapestry-core
>>5.0.18
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org
>
>


-- 
Olle Hallin
Senior Java Developer and Architect
olle.hal...@crisp.se
www.crisp.se


Re: Tapestry 5.0 Final Release - 5.0.18

2008-12-15 Thread Michael Gerzabek

Thank you Howard and Team!

This is really a great piece of software. In my humble opinion it's the 
best web application framework available. Development is straight 
forward, though you have to learn the Tapestry way of doing things. But 
that's also true for any other framework out in space.


Special thanks also to the list for coaching people on the usage of T5. 
This is a big help in acquiring the knowledge to use T5 effectively.


Michael

Howard Lewis Ship schrieb:

Apache Tapestry 5.0 final release (5.0.18)

After nearly three years of development, the final release of Apache
Tapestry 5.0 is now available for download.

Apache Tapestry 5 is a total rewrite of the Tapestry web application
framework, bringing forward Tapestry's core concepts: reusable
components, true encapsulation, readable templates, well thought-out
localization/internationalization, and easy management of server-side
state.

Tapestry 5 builds on top of this with a host of new features:

* True POJO component classes: no base classes to extend, no
  interfaces to implement.

* Live class reloading: no need to redeploy to see code changes.

* XML templates with namespaces.

* Minimal configuration via naming conventions and annotations.

* Integrated Ajax support, built on top of Prototype and
  Scriptaculous.

* Automatic client-side form input validation.

* High performance via pooled objects (and by avoiding the use of
  reflection).

* Automatic REST-style URLs.

* Built-in integration with Hibernate and Spring.

* Best-of-breed exception reporting.

* Built-in extensible mega-components: BeanEditForm, BeanDisplay and
  Grid (to edit and display any JavaBean or collection of JavaBeans).

Tapestry organizes your application into pages, and components within
pages; pages and components are ordinary POJOs: not singletons (like
servlets). Tapestry combines pages, page templates, components,
component templates, and other resources together for you, managing
server-side state, the creation of URLs and the dispatch of incoming
requests. You build your application in terms of the methods and
properties of your objects, not in terms of URLs or the Servlet API.

Tapestry features great exception reporting to keep you on track, and
live class reloading to keep you agile.  Tapestry templates are XML
documents, using a namespace for Tapestry-specific elements. Tapestry
is designed to be easy to develop, using any standard IDE with an XML
editor.

Tapestry is simple, sensible and fun. It keeps you productive by
freeing you from the boring, mechanical aspects of web application
development. You can stay focused on what makes your application
interesting and unique, and let Tapestry handle all the ugly plumbing.

Tapestry is made available under the Apache Software License 2.0.
Tapestry is free to download, free to use, free to redistribute and
free to modify.

Tapestry 5.0.18

* Project page: http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/

* Download: http://tapestry.apache.org/download.html

* Release Notes:
  http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/release-notes.html

* Upgrade Notes: http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/upgrade.html

* Via Maven:


org.apache.tapestry
tapestry-core
5.0.18




  



-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org



Re: Tapestry 5.0 Final Release - 5.0.18

2008-12-14 Thread Christian Edward Gruber
Yes, congratulations and many thanks.  T5 has turned into the best web  
development framework, in my view, easily knocking out WebObjects, as  
well as page-at-a-time-MVC and scripting systems like Struts and jsps.


regards,
Christian.

On 15-Dec-08, at 02:08 , Peter Stavrinides wrote:

Thanks for all your hard work! Sincere congratulations to Howard and  
the Tapestry Devs.


Peter

--
If you are not an intended recipient of this e-mail, please notify  
the sender, delete it and do not read, act upon, print, disclose,  
copy, retain or redistribute it. Please visit http://www.albourne.com/email.html 
 for important additional terms relating to this e-mail.


- Original Message -
From: "Angelo Chen" 
To: users@tapestry.apache.org
Sent: Saturday, 13 December, 2008 2:15:47 AM GMT +02:00 Athens,  
Beirut, Bucharest, Istanbul

Subject: Re: Tapestry 5.0 Final Release - 5.0.18


good news, we finally hava final release:)  do we have to do any  
changes to

the pom.xml? or just like before, simply update the version number?


Howard Lewis Ship wrote:


Apache Tapestry 5.0 final release (5.0.18)

* Via Maven:

   
   org.apache.tapestry
tapestry-core
5.0.18
   



--
Howard M. Lewis Ship

Creator Apache Tapestry and Apache HiveMind

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org





--
View this message in context: 
http://www.nabble.com/Tapestry-5.0-Final-Release---5.0.18-tp20981431p20985850.html
Sent from the Tapestry - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.


-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org


-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org




-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org



Re: Tapestry 5.0 Final Release - 5.0.18

2008-12-14 Thread Peter Stavrinides
Thanks for all your hard work! Sincere congratulations to Howard and the 
Tapestry Devs.

Peter

-- 
If you are not an intended recipient of this e-mail, please notify the sender, 
delete it and do not read, act upon, print, disclose, copy, retain or 
redistribute it. Please visit http://www.albourne.com/email.html for important 
additional terms relating to this e-mail.

- Original Message -
From: "Angelo Chen" 
To: users@tapestry.apache.org
Sent: Saturday, 13 December, 2008 2:15:47 AM GMT +02:00 Athens, Beirut, 
Bucharest, Istanbul
Subject: Re: Tapestry 5.0 Final Release - 5.0.18


good news, we finally hava final release:)  do we have to do any changes to
the pom.xml? or just like before, simply update the version number?


Howard Lewis Ship wrote:
> 
> Apache Tapestry 5.0 final release (5.0.18)
> 
> * Via Maven:
> 
> 
> org.apache.tapestry
>   tapestry-core
>   5.0.18
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Howard M. Lewis Ship
> 
> Creator Apache Tapestry and Apache HiveMind
> 
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org
> 
> 
> 

-- 
View this message in context: 
http://www.nabble.com/Tapestry-5.0-Final-Release---5.0.18-tp20981431p20985850.html
Sent from the Tapestry - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.


-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org


-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org



Re: Tapestry 5.0 Final Release - 5.0.18

2008-12-12 Thread Angelo Chen

good news, we finally hava final release:)  do we have to do any changes to
the pom.xml? or just like before, simply update the version number?


Howard Lewis Ship wrote:
> 
> Apache Tapestry 5.0 final release (5.0.18)
> 
> * Via Maven:
> 
> 
> org.apache.tapestry
>   tapestry-core
>   5.0.18
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Howard M. Lewis Ship
> 
> Creator Apache Tapestry and Apache HiveMind
> 
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org
> 
> 
> 

-- 
View this message in context: 
http://www.nabble.com/Tapestry-5.0-Final-Release---5.0.18-tp20981431p20985850.html
Sent from the Tapestry - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.


-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org



Re: Tapestry 5.0 Final Release - 5.0.18

2008-12-12 Thread Geoff Callender
My congratulations to Howard and everyone else on the team. Tapestry  
5.0 is an absolutely magnificent piece of work.


Regards,

Geoff Callender

On 13/12/2008, at 7:53 AM, Martijn Brinkers wrote:


Hi Howard,

Congratulations with the final release. Tapestry is awsome!

Best regards,

Martijn Brinkers

On Fri, 2008-12-12 at 10:52 -0800, Howard Lewis Ship wrote:

Apache Tapestry 5.0 final release (5.0.18)

After nearly three years of development, the final release of Apache
Tapestry 5.0 is now available for download.

Apache Tapestry 5 is a total rewrite of the Tapestry web application
framework, bringing forward Tapestry's core concepts: reusable
components, true encapsulation, readable templates, well thought-out
localization/internationalization, and easy management of server-side
state.

Tapestry 5 builds on top of this with a host of new features:

* True POJO component classes: no base classes to extend, no
 interfaces to implement.

* Live class reloading: no need to redeploy to see code changes.

* XML templates with namespaces.

* Minimal configuration via naming conventions and annotations.

* Integrated Ajax support, built on top of Prototype and
 Scriptaculous.

* Automatic client-side form input validation.

* High performance via pooled objects (and by avoiding the use of
 reflection).

* Automatic REST-style URLs.

* Built-in integration with Hibernate and Spring.

* Best-of-breed exception reporting.

* Built-in extensible mega-components: BeanEditForm, BeanDisplay and
 Grid (to edit and display any JavaBean or collection of JavaBeans).

Tapestry organizes your application into pages, and components within
pages; pages and components are ordinary POJOs: not singletons (like
servlets). Tapestry combines pages, page templates, components,
component templates, and other resources together for you, managing
server-side state, the creation of URLs and the dispatch of incoming
requests. You build your application in terms of the methods and
properties of your objects, not in terms of URLs or the Servlet API.

Tapestry features great exception reporting to keep you on track, and
live class reloading to keep you agile.  Tapestry templates are XML
documents, using a namespace for Tapestry-specific elements. Tapestry
is designed to be easy to develop, using any standard IDE with an XML
editor.

Tapestry is simple, sensible and fun. It keeps you productive by
freeing you from the boring, mechanical aspects of web application
development. You can stay focused on what makes your application
interesting and unique, and let Tapestry handle all the ugly  
plumbing.


Tapestry is made available under the Apache Software License 2.0.
Tapestry is free to download, free to use, free to redistribute and
free to modify.

Tapestry 5.0.18

* Project page: http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/

* Download: http://tapestry.apache.org/download.html

* Release Notes:
 http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/release-notes.html

* Upgrade Notes: http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/upgrade.html

* Via Maven:

   
   org.apache.tapestry
tapestry-core
5.0.18
   






-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org




-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org



Re: Tapestry 5.0 Final Release - 5.0.18

2008-12-12 Thread Martijn Brinkers
Hi Howard,

Congratulations with the final release. Tapestry is awsome!

Best regards,

Martijn Brinkers

On Fri, 2008-12-12 at 10:52 -0800, Howard Lewis Ship wrote:
> Apache Tapestry 5.0 final release (5.0.18)
> 
> After nearly three years of development, the final release of Apache
> Tapestry 5.0 is now available for download.
> 
> Apache Tapestry 5 is a total rewrite of the Tapestry web application
> framework, bringing forward Tapestry's core concepts: reusable
> components, true encapsulation, readable templates, well thought-out
> localization/internationalization, and easy management of server-side
> state.
> 
> Tapestry 5 builds on top of this with a host of new features:
> 
> * True POJO component classes: no base classes to extend, no
>   interfaces to implement.
> 
> * Live class reloading: no need to redeploy to see code changes.
> 
> * XML templates with namespaces.
> 
> * Minimal configuration via naming conventions and annotations.
> 
> * Integrated Ajax support, built on top of Prototype and
>   Scriptaculous.
> 
> * Automatic client-side form input validation.
> 
> * High performance via pooled objects (and by avoiding the use of
>   reflection).
> 
> * Automatic REST-style URLs.
> 
> * Built-in integration with Hibernate and Spring.
> 
> * Best-of-breed exception reporting.
> 
> * Built-in extensible mega-components: BeanEditForm, BeanDisplay and
>   Grid (to edit and display any JavaBean or collection of JavaBeans).
> 
> Tapestry organizes your application into pages, and components within
> pages; pages and components are ordinary POJOs: not singletons (like
> servlets). Tapestry combines pages, page templates, components,
> component templates, and other resources together for you, managing
> server-side state, the creation of URLs and the dispatch of incoming
> requests. You build your application in terms of the methods and
> properties of your objects, not in terms of URLs or the Servlet API.
> 
> Tapestry features great exception reporting to keep you on track, and
> live class reloading to keep you agile.  Tapestry templates are XML
> documents, using a namespace for Tapestry-specific elements. Tapestry
> is designed to be easy to develop, using any standard IDE with an XML
> editor.
> 
> Tapestry is simple, sensible and fun. It keeps you productive by
> freeing you from the boring, mechanical aspects of web application
> development. You can stay focused on what makes your application
> interesting and unique, and let Tapestry handle all the ugly plumbing.
> 
> Tapestry is made available under the Apache Software License 2.0.
> Tapestry is free to download, free to use, free to redistribute and
> free to modify.
> 
> Tapestry 5.0.18
> 
> * Project page: http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/
> 
> * Download: http://tapestry.apache.org/download.html
> 
> * Release Notes:
>   http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/release-notes.html
> 
> * Upgrade Notes: http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/upgrade.html
> 
> * Via Maven:
> 
> 
> org.apache.tapestry
>   tapestry-core
>   5.0.18
> 
> 
> 
> 


-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org



Tapestry 5.0 Final Release - 5.0.18

2008-12-12 Thread Howard Lewis Ship
Apache Tapestry 5.0 final release (5.0.18)

After nearly three years of development, the final release of Apache
Tapestry 5.0 is now available for download.

Apache Tapestry 5 is a total rewrite of the Tapestry web application
framework, bringing forward Tapestry's core concepts: reusable
components, true encapsulation, readable templates, well thought-out
localization/internationalization, and easy management of server-side
state.

Tapestry 5 builds on top of this with a host of new features:

* True POJO component classes: no base classes to extend, no
  interfaces to implement.

* Live class reloading: no need to redeploy to see code changes.

* XML templates with namespaces.

* Minimal configuration via naming conventions and annotations.

* Integrated Ajax support, built on top of Prototype and
  Scriptaculous.

* Automatic client-side form input validation.

* High performance via pooled objects (and by avoiding the use of
  reflection).

* Automatic REST-style URLs.

* Built-in integration with Hibernate and Spring.

* Best-of-breed exception reporting.

* Built-in extensible mega-components: BeanEditForm, BeanDisplay and
  Grid (to edit and display any JavaBean or collection of JavaBeans).

Tapestry organizes your application into pages, and components within
pages; pages and components are ordinary POJOs: not singletons (like
servlets). Tapestry combines pages, page templates, components,
component templates, and other resources together for you, managing
server-side state, the creation of URLs and the dispatch of incoming
requests. You build your application in terms of the methods and
properties of your objects, not in terms of URLs or the Servlet API.

Tapestry features great exception reporting to keep you on track, and
live class reloading to keep you agile.  Tapestry templates are XML
documents, using a namespace for Tapestry-specific elements. Tapestry
is designed to be easy to develop, using any standard IDE with an XML
editor.

Tapestry is simple, sensible and fun. It keeps you productive by
freeing you from the boring, mechanical aspects of web application
development. You can stay focused on what makes your application
interesting and unique, and let Tapestry handle all the ugly plumbing.

Tapestry is made available under the Apache Software License 2.0.
Tapestry is free to download, free to use, free to redistribute and
free to modify.

Tapestry 5.0.18

* Project page: http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/

* Download: http://tapestry.apache.org/download.html

* Release Notes:
  http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/release-notes.html

* Upgrade Notes: http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry5/upgrade.html

* Via Maven:


org.apache.tapestry
tapestry-core
5.0.18




-- 
Howard M. Lewis Ship

Creator Apache Tapestry and Apache HiveMind

-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org



Re: Re: JSR-168/268 support and Tapestry 5.0

2006-12-30 Thread Kristian Marinkovic
hi konstantin,IMHO portlets are going to get more and more important. if you lookat the new portlets 2.0 spec you will see AJAX defined to reload portletcontent, an event mechanism to notify one or more portlets, a new interportlet communication protocol, central session handling aso. With this spec (still in public review) it will be possible to write portals that behavelike "web 2.0" sites but in fact are composed of different web apps.Portlets serve as THE integration API to combine different web applicationsinto a single one. A scenario may be in a big company that already uses 2 (or several) web applications to cover their processes (written in different frameworks). They may conclude that the processes could by better supported if the users had parts of both applications configured into one workbench to see dependencies and impacts immediatly. Thats where portlets 2.0 comes into play :)so i think an integration of Tapestry 5 with portlet 2.0 is necessary )g,krisAn: Tapestry users Von: Konstantin Ignatyev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Datum: 29.12.2006 10:15PMThema: Re: JSR-168/268 support and Tapestry 5.0does it make sense at all to support portals? Doespeople still use and develop portals?I mean that with the AJAX proliferation it looks like "Clientlets" make much more sense than Portlets andtherefore Portals in a sense of JSR-168 are headed tooblivion.What is the peoples' experience and opinion?--- Howard Lewis Ship <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:> That should be "action" requests and "render"> requests.> > The fact that servlet Tapestry 5 differentiates> between the two will make it> easier, or at least make it more consistent, for> portlet Tapestry 5.> > On 12/29/06, Jan Vissers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:> >>Konstantin IgnatyevPS: If this is a typical day on planet earth, humans will add fifteen million tons of carbon to the atmosphere, destroy 115 square miles of tropical rainforest, create seventy-two miles of desert, eliminate between forty to one hundred species, erode seventy-one million tons of topsoil, add 2,700 tons of CFCs to the stratosphere, and increase their population by 263,000Bowers, C.A.  The Culture of Denial:  Why the Environmental Movement Needs a Strategy for Reforming Universities and Public Schools.  New York:  State University of New York Press, 1997: (4) (5) (p.206)-To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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



Re: JSR-168/268 support and Tapestry 5.0

2006-12-29 Thread Konstantin Ignatyev
does it make sense at all to support portals? Does
people still use and develop portals?

I mean that with the AJAX proliferation it looks like 
"Clientlets" make much more sense than Portlets and
therefore Portals in a sense of JSR-168 are headed to
oblivion.

What is the peoples' experience and opinion?

--- Howard Lewis Ship <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> That should be "action" requests and "render"
> requests.
> 
> The fact that servlet Tapestry 5 differentiates
> between the two will make it
> easier, or at least make it more consistent, for
> portlet Tapestry 5.
> 
> On 12/29/06, Jan Vissers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> >
>


Konstantin Ignatyev




PS: If this is a typical day on planet earth, humans will add fifteen million 
tons of carbon to the atmosphere, destroy 115 square miles of tropical 
rainforest, create seventy-two miles of desert, eliminate between forty to one 
hundred species, erode seventy-one million tons of topsoil, add 2,700 tons of 
CFCs to the stratosphere, and increase their population by 263,000

Bowers, C.A.  The Culture of Denial:  Why the Environmental Movement Needs a 
Strategy for Reforming Universities and Public Schools.  New York:  State 
University of New York Press, 1997: (4) (5) (p.206)

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



Re: JSR-168/268 support and Tapestry 5.0

2006-12-29 Thread Howard Lewis Ship

That should be "action" requests and "render" requests.

The fact that servlet Tapestry 5 differentiates between the two will make it
easier, or at least make it more consistent, for portlet Tapestry 5.

On 12/29/06, Jan Vissers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


From Howard:

"T5 should have similar portlet support to what's in T4.  In fact, I've
let portlets influence a major aspect of Tapestry: as with portlets,
there are distinct "action" requests and "portlet" requests.  However,
my priority is to get servlet support working, so I can't commit to when
portlet support will be available."

For me this is a "clear" maybe... ;-)

Rgs,
Jan.

Jan Vissers wrote:
> Will T5.0 provide continued support for JSR-168. And how about JSR-268?
>
> Thanks,
> Jan.
>
>
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
>
>

--
Cumquat Information Technology
De Dreef 19
3706 BR Zeist
T +31 (0)30 - 6940490
F +31 (0)30 - 6940499
http://www.cumquat.nl

[EMAIL PROTECTED]
M +31 6 51 169 556



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





--
Howard M. Lewis Ship
TWD Consulting, Inc.
Independent J2EE / Open-Source Java Consultant
Creator and PMC Chair, Apache Tapestry
Creator, Apache HiveMind

Professional Tapestry training, mentoring, support
and project work.  http://howardlewisship.com


Re: JSR-168/268 support and Tapestry 5.0

2006-12-29 Thread Jan Vissers

From Howard:

"T5 should have similar portlet support to what's in T4.  In fact, I've 
let portlets influence a major aspect of Tapestry: as with portlets, 
there are distinct "action" requests and "portlet" requests.  However, 
my priority is to get servlet support working, so I can't commit to when 
portlet support will be available."


For me this is a "clear" maybe... ;-)

Rgs,
Jan.

Jan Vissers wrote:

Will T5.0 provide continued support for JSR-168. And how about JSR-268?

Thanks,
Jan.


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



  


--
Cumquat Information Technology
De Dreef 19
3706 BR Zeist
T +31 (0)30 - 6940490
F +31 (0)30 - 6940499
http://www.cumquat.nl

[EMAIL PROTECTED]
M +31 6 51 169 556



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



JSR-168/268 support and Tapestry 5.0

2006-12-27 Thread Jan Vissers
Will T5.0 provide continued support for JSR-168. And how about JSR-268?

Thanks,
Jan.


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



Re: tapestry 5.0

2006-12-16 Thread Howard Lewis Ship

So far, whenever I've added some interesting functionality.

On 12/15/06, Massimo Lusetti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


On 12/15/06, Howard Lewis Ship <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> What's going on is that Tapestry is in a snapshot stage, where we don't
have
> official releases published to the central Maven repository, but do have
> -SNAPSHOT releases (a concept within Maven) published to a public
repository
> at Apache.  So if you don't want to build it all yourself, you need to
point
> your local Maven at it.
>
> The idea with SNAPSHOT releases is that your local copy of Maven will no
> rely on the "fake" version number, SNAPSHOT, but will keep checking the
> snapshot repository for the latest version of the jar.

Which is your policy on the frequency of deploys?

--
Massimo
http://meridio.blogspot.com

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





--
Howard M. Lewis Ship
TWD Consulting, Inc.
Independent J2EE / Open-Source Java Consultant
Creator and PMC Chair, Apache Tapestry
Creator, Apache HiveMind

Professional Tapestry training, mentoring, support
and project work.  http://howardlewisship.com


Re: tapestry 5.0

2006-12-15 Thread Massimo Lusetti

On 12/15/06, Howard Lewis Ship <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


What's going on is that Tapestry is in a snapshot stage, where we don't have
official releases published to the central Maven repository, but do have
-SNAPSHOT releases (a concept within Maven) published to a public repository
at Apache.  So if you don't want to build it all yourself, you need to point
your local Maven at it.

The idea with SNAPSHOT releases is that your local copy of Maven will no
rely on the "fake" version number, SNAPSHOT, but will keep checking the
snapshot repository for the latest version of the jar.


Which is your policy on the frequency of deploys?

--
Massimo
http://meridio.blogspot.com

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



Re: tapestry 5.0

2006-12-14 Thread Howard Lewis Ship

What's going on is that Tapestry is in a snapshot stage, where we don't have
official releases published to the central Maven repository, but do have
-SNAPSHOT releases (a concept within Maven) published to a public repository
at Apache.  So if you don't want to build it all yourself, you need to point
your local Maven at it.

The idea with SNAPSHOT releases is that your local copy of Maven will no
rely on the "fake" version number, SNAPSHOT, but will keep checking the
snapshot repository for the latest version of the jar.

On 12/14/06, Howard Lewis Ship <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


I think the proper solution may be to add the following to your pom.xml:



apache.snapshots
 http://people.apache.org/maven-snapshot-repository


howardlewisship.com
http://howardlewisship.com/repository


codehaus.snapshots 
http://snapshots.repository.codehaus.org



openqa
OpenQA Maven Repository
http://maven.openqa.org/ 



On 12/13/06, bueggers <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > wrote:
>
>
> I did it this way:
>
> svn co
> http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/tapestry/tapestry5/tapestry-core/trunk/
> tapestry-core
> svn co
> http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/tapestry/tapestry5/tapestry-project/trunk/
>
> tapestry-project
> svn co
> http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/tapestry/tapestry5/tapestry-ioc/trunk/
> tapestry-ioc
> svn co
>
> http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/tapestry/tapestry5/tapestry-Workbench/trunk/
> tapestry-Workbench
> cd tapestry-project
> mvn install
>
> run that, take a breakfast or have a little walk in the meanwhile and
> when
> you come back after half an hour or so, you have tapestry-core.jar with
> all
> necessary dependencies on your local maven rep.
>
>
>
> tom.burt wrote:
> >
> > Trying to recreate example from screen cast 1. When I list possible
> > dependencies in Maven, I do not get tapestry-core as a possibility. I
> do
> > get tapestry-ioc and tapestry-project. I have been able to download
> > tapestry-core, tapestry-ioc and tapestry-project from svn with out a
> > problem. Even tried copying dependencies from pom.xml for
> tapestry-project
> > to pom.xml in my new project, but that did not help. Any suggestions?
> >
> >
> >
>
> --
> View this message in context:
> http://www.nabble.com/tapestry-5.0-tf2818273.html#a7867368
> Sent from the Tapestry - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
>
>
> -
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>


--
Howard M. Lewis Ship
TWD Consulting, Inc.
Independent J2EE / Open-Source Java Consultant
Creator and PMC Chair, Apache Tapestry
Creator, Apache HiveMind

Professional Tapestry training, mentoring, support
and project work.   http://howardlewisship.com





--
Howard M. Lewis Ship
TWD Consulting, Inc.
Independent J2EE / Open-Source Java Consultant
Creator and PMC Chair, Apache Tapestry
Creator, Apache HiveMind

Professional Tapestry training, mentoring, support
and project work.  http://howardlewisship.com


Re: tapestry 5.0

2006-12-14 Thread Howard Lewis Ship

I think the proper solution may be to add the following to your pom.xml:

   
   
   apache.snapshots
   http://people.apache.org/maven-snapshot-repository
   
   
   howardlewisship.com
   http://howardlewisship.com/repository
   
   
   codehaus.snapshots
   http://snapshots.repository.codehaus.org
   
   
   
   openqa
   OpenQA Maven Repository
   http://maven.openqa.org/
   
   

On 12/13/06, bueggers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:



I did it this way:

svn co
http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/tapestry/tapestry5/tapestry-core/trunk/
tapestry-core
svn co
http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/tapestry/tapestry5/tapestry-project/trunk/
tapestry-project
svn co
http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/tapestry/tapestry5/tapestry-ioc/trunk/
tapestry-ioc
svn co

http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/tapestry/tapestry5/tapestry-Workbench/trunk/
tapestry-Workbench
cd tapestry-project
mvn install

run that, take a breakfast or have a little walk in the meanwhile and when
you come back after half an hour or so, you have tapestry-core.jar with
all
necessary dependencies on your local maven rep.



tom.burt wrote:
>
> Trying to recreate example from screen cast 1. When I list possible
> dependencies in Maven, I do not get tapestry-core as a possibility. I do
> get tapestry-ioc and tapestry-project. I have been able to download
> tapestry-core, tapestry-ioc and tapestry-project from svn with out a
> problem. Even tried copying dependencies from pom.xml for
tapestry-project
> to pom.xml in my new project, but that did not help. Any suggestions?
>
>
>

--
View this message in context:
http://www.nabble.com/tapestry-5.0-tf2818273.html#a7867368
Sent from the Tapestry - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.


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





--
Howard M. Lewis Ship
TWD Consulting, Inc.
Independent J2EE / Open-Source Java Consultant
Creator and PMC Chair, Apache Tapestry
Creator, Apache HiveMind

Professional Tapestry training, mentoring, support
and project work.  http://howardlewisship.com


Re: tapestry 5.0

2006-12-13 Thread bueggers

I did it this way:

svn co
http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/tapestry/tapestry5/tapestry-core/trunk/
tapestry-core
svn co
http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/tapestry/tapestry5/tapestry-project/trunk/
tapestry-project
svn co
http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/tapestry/tapestry5/tapestry-ioc/trunk/
tapestry-ioc
svn co
http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/tapestry/tapestry5/tapestry-Workbench/trunk/
tapestry-Workbench
cd tapestry-project
mvn install 

run that, take a breakfast or have a little walk in the meanwhile and when
you come back after half an hour or so, you have tapestry-core.jar with all
necessary dependencies on your local maven rep. 



tom.burt wrote:
> 
> Trying to recreate example from screen cast 1. When I list possible
> dependencies in Maven, I do not get tapestry-core as a possibility. I do
> get tapestry-ioc and tapestry-project. I have been able to download
> tapestry-core, tapestry-ioc and tapestry-project from svn with out a
> problem. Even tried copying dependencies from pom.xml for tapestry-project
> to pom.xml in my new project, but that did not help. Any suggestions?
> 
> 
> 

-- 
View this message in context: 
http://www.nabble.com/tapestry-5.0-tf2818273.html#a7867368
Sent from the Tapestry - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.


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



tapestry 5.0

2006-12-13 Thread tom . burt
Trying to recreate example from screen cast 1. When I list possible 
dependencies in Maven, I do not get tapestry-core as a possibility. I do get 
tapestry-ioc and tapestry-project. I have been able to download tapestry-core, 
tapestry-ioc and tapestry-project from svn with out a problem. Even tried 
copying dependencies from pom.xml for tapestry-project to pom.xml in my new 
project, but that did not help. Any suggestions?



Re: Question about Tapestry 5.0

2006-11-22 Thread Howard Lewis Ship

Tapestry 5 performance has been really good, for the trival demo apps I've
put together so far.

Tapestry 4 could probably be optimized a bit more; for example, it uses a
lot of StringBuffers which are pretty slow.

The overhead of the DOM is not so great, and there will be a lot of room to
optimize.  It's pretty streamlined compared to, say, Dom4J.

It also makes things a lot easier to code since you can randomly access any
node in the tree.  This simplifies the complex relationship between Label
and TextField; the Label can wait unti after the TextField renders in order
to determine the correct value for its @for attribute.

Most requests are taking under 4ms, and that includes the time to check for
invalidated files (in production, that check will occur less often).

Code is coming together on it, but there's so much more to do, including
localization, assets, JavaScript support, the rest of the form components
client- and server-side validation, invisible instrumentation, etc.


On 11/7/06, Vinicius Carvalho <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


Hello there! It's been a while since my last post, I tried to catch up,
but
after reading over 500 topics I gave up ;). I was checking Tapestry 5 site
(Wow it changed so much that I could not even recognize it as Tapestry ;)
).

One thing that intrigues me is the use of DOM from the MarkupWriter.
Wouldn't it degrade performance?

Regards

--
IBM Certified SOA Solution Designer
IBM Certified Database Associate - DB2 V8.1 Family
Sun Certified Enterprise Architect (Part I)





--
Howard M. Lewis Ship
TWD Consulting, Inc.
Independent J2EE / Open-Source Java Consultant
Creator and PMC Chair, Apache Tapestry
Creator, Apache HiveMind

Professional Tapestry training, mentoring, support
and project work.  http://howardlewisship.com


Re: Question about Tapestry 5.0

2006-11-21 Thread Galam

I am excited about the new concepts in Tapestry 5, when will it available
for?



On 11/7/06, Vinicius Carvalho <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


Hello there! It's been a while since my last post, I tried to catch up,
but
after reading over 500 topics I gave up ;). I was checking Tapestry 5 site
(Wow it changed so much that I could not even recognize it as Tapestry ;)
).

One thing that intrigues me is the use of DOM from the MarkupWriter.
Wouldn't it degrade performance?

Regards

--
IBM Certified SOA Solution Designer
IBM Certified Database Associate - DB2 V8.1 Family
Sun Certified Enterprise Architect (Part I)




Re: RE: Question about Tapestry 5.0

2006-11-21 Thread Robin Ericsson

On 11/21/06, Payne, Matthew <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Given that 4.1 will not be out till spring 2007.  Count on 2 or more years.
Though I hope I'm wrong.


Tapestry 4.1 != Tapestry 5, it's not even the same codebase. Think of
them as two different frameworks that looks very similar and have the
same name :)

--
   regards,
   Robin

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



Question about Tapestry 5.0

2006-11-07 Thread Vinicius Carvalho

Hello there! It's been a while since my last post, I tried to catch up, but
after reading over 500 topics I gave up ;). I was checking Tapestry 5 site
(Wow it changed so much that I could not even recognize it as Tapestry ;) ).

One thing that intrigues me is the use of DOM from the MarkupWriter.
Wouldn't it degrade performance?

Regards

--
IBM Certified SOA Solution Designer
IBM Certified Database Associate - DB2 V8.1 Family
Sun Certified Enterprise Architect (Part I)