It would be better to continue the thread on dev@struts.apache.org, but there's no reason to take the discussion off list.
-Ted. On 4/24/06, John B. Walker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Thanks Ted! I will dust off my old sourceforge.net account and take this > conversation off the user group with you personally. I appreciate the help. > It's people like you that make it easy for developers to come into the Open > Dev community. > > Thanks again, > John > > > On 4/23/06, Ted Husted <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > On 4/23/06, John B. Walker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > My next question for you Ted (or others), is: > > "How would I contribute this source back to Struts, and do you think that > > the committee would be interested in adopting this framework into the > Struts > > project?" > > The first step would be to get the code "out there" where people can > try it. This can simply be a matter of setting up a home page that > describes the product with a link to download the package. A very good > way to get started is to setup a Java.net or Sourceforge.net project. > If you don't want to start your own project, there is a Struts > SourceForge project (struts.sf.net) where you could upload the code. > Just take out a SourceForge account and let me know what your user id, > and a working name for the product, and I'll setup a module for you, > > In general, the ASF isn't interested in donations of code that do not > include a community of developers who are ready, willing, and able to > maintain the code. The ASF has no paid staff, so we have to be sure > that there are volunteers to do the work. The first step is finding > volunteers to help with an open source project is to publish the > source :) > > HTH, Ted. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]