As I said, jsf will still be entirely optional, it's just we will no longer support jsf 1.2
Pete Muir http://in.relation.to/Bloggers/Pete On 2 Dec 2010, at 17:11, Clint Popetz <[email protected]> wrote: > On Thu, Dec 2, 2010 at 11:02 AM, Dan Allen <[email protected]> wrote: >> On Thu, Dec 2, 2010 at 10:28 AM, Pete Muir <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>> AFACIT this will really force Tomcat etc. users to use JSF2... >>> >> >> Yep. I think this is a matter of us leaving the fence and deciding that we >> are going to advocate the EE 6 technology stack as a baseline. We are >> recommending a new programming model, after all, so I think it's consistent >> to select the optimal compliments. I've was thinking along the same lines >> for Seam Servlet...we should really be assuming we have Servlet 3, or at the >> very least the Servlet-CDI integration (which Weld Servlet patches in). >> Otherwise, we sort of look hesitant in our message to adopt EE 6. So I'm all >> for it. > > Yuck. > > -Clint > > (Loves CDI, uses wicket, deploys a large app on a cluster of 30 tomcat > instances, doesn't want a needless jsf dependency.) > > > >> -Dan >> >> -- >> Dan Allen >> Principal Software Engineer, Red Hat | Author of Seam in Action >> Registered Linux User #231597 >> >> http://mojavelinux.com >> http://mojavelinux.com/seaminaction >> http://www.google.com/profiles/dan.j.allen >> >> _______________________________________________ >> weld-dev mailing list >> [email protected] >> https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/weld-dev >> > > > > -- > Clint Popetz > http://42lines.net > Scalable Web Application Development _______________________________________________ weld-dev mailing list [email protected] https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/weld-dev
