Re: python & java

2007-03-20 Thread Diez B. Roggisch
sandeep patil wrote: > hi > > i am fresher i python can any bady tell me who i will use python in > web technologies in java base application. > what it roll No idea where who rolls to whom, but you should check out jython: http://www.jython.org/ Diez -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinf

Re: Re: python & java

2007-03-20 Thread rishi pathak
Jython is written in pure java. You can use java classes inside python and also can use python classes inside java You can write applets too in python using jython. It converts your python code in java code. On 20 Mar 2007 10:06:00 -, sandeep patil <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: what diff be

Re: python & java

2007-03-20 Thread rishi pathak
See www.*jython*.org On 20 Mar 2007 02:23:07 -0700, sandeep patil <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: hi i am fresher i python can any bady tell me who i will use python in web technologies in java base application. what it roll sandeep patil -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Python + Java Integration

2006-08-27 Thread Steve Holden
Chas Emerick wrote: > On Aug 23, 2006, at 11:50 AM, Ben Sizer wrote: [...] > > I was having a discussion with a friend of mine recently, where I told > him how depressed I became for a period after I realized that sales, > marketing, and perception are all that really matter in this kooky > tec

Re: Python + Java Integration

2006-08-27 Thread Steve Holden
Fredrik Lundh wrote: > Ben Sizer wrote: > > >>Java itself never deserved to be the 'next' anything anyway. > > > I've had a lot of developers come up to me and > say, "I haven't had this much fun in a long time. > It sure beats writing Cobol" -- James Gosling > > > "Java is Objec

Re: Python + Java Integration

2006-08-24 Thread Paul Boddie
Fredrik Lundh wrote: > Ben Sizer wrote: > > > Java itself never deserved to be the 'next' anything anyway. > > I've had a lot of developers come up to me and > say, "I haven't had this much fun in a long time. > It sure beats writing Cobol" -- James Gosling Nice quote! It also reinforc

Re: Python + Java Integration

2006-08-23 Thread Fredrik Lundh
Ben Sizer wrote: > Java itself never deserved to be the 'next' anything anyway. I've had a lot of developers come up to me and say, "I haven't had this much fun in a long time. It sure beats writing Cobol" -- James Gosling -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Python + Java Integration

2006-08-23 Thread Chas Emerick
On Aug 23, 2006, at 12:30 PM, Diez wrote: - ruby has no notion of java-library support. So if anything lures java developers from J2EE-land to rails, its the framework itself. Which, by my standards, is at least met if not excelled by TurboGears and Django. So it's marketing, but of a different kin

Re: Python + Java Integration

2006-08-23 Thread Chas Emerick
On Aug 23, 2006, at 11:50 AM, Ben Sizer wrote:Chas Emerick wrote: There is no doubt that Ruby's success is a concern for anyone who sees it as diminishing Python's status.  One of the reasons for Ruby's success is certainly the notion (originally advocated by Bruce Tate, if I'm not mistaken) that i

Re: Python + Java Integration

2006-08-23 Thread hiaips
> Java itself never deserved to be the 'next' anything anyway. It was > sold on hype and has never lived up to it. I can see your point from a > business perspective but I like to think Python is sold on its merits > and not on being the new panacea for middle managers to deploy. Bravo. I could

Re: Python + Java Integration

2006-08-23 Thread Diez B. Roggisch
Chas Emerick wrote: > This may seem like it's coming out of left field for a minute, but > bear with me. > > There is no doubt that Ruby's success is a concern for anyone who > sees it as diminishing Python's status. One of the reasons for > Ruby's success is certainly the notion (originally adv

Re: Python + Java Integration

2006-08-23 Thread Ben Sizer
Chas Emerick wrote: > There is no doubt that Ruby's success is a concern for anyone who > sees it as diminishing Python's status. One of the reasons for > Ruby's success is certainly the notion (originally advocated by Bruce > Tate, if I'm not mistaken) that it is the "next Java" -- the language >