Some tips I could say:

   - GWT is a transpiler / compiler to JavaScript, *so the result only runs 
   on Web browser, no server component*. Server container or Web server 
   only used for delivering the HTML, JS and CSS. So actually you could just 
   use the result JS from the file system and make a double click on the HTML 
   file to open your web app (JS).
   - The simplest example I build is the Java Calculator from this article: 
   http://bit.ly/WebJavaStory. In this simple Maven example you can see how 
   to run the web app, how to code, transpile and unit test and also to debug 
   the simple calculator all with web browser.

I'm using GWT since 2006 / 2007 and until today I haven't seen any 
comparable tools which makes your work very productive, especially as a 
Java developer.

Hope this helps! Have fun!

[email protected] schrieb am Dienstag, 22. Dezember 2020 um 12:40:39 UTC+1:

> We also have a Padlet for GWT 😉
>
> I try to collect all the information about GWT / J2CL on one Black Board: 
> https://padlet.com/lofidewanto/gwtintro
>
> There are articles, presentations, groups and other information for a 
> modern GWT / J2CL development...
>
> Hope this helps!
>
> [email protected] schrieb am Samstag, 19. Dezember 2020 um 01:30:44 
> UTC+1:
>
>> Thank you very much. I ll give it a try.
>>
>> On Friday, December 18, 2020 at 4:44:32 PM UTC+1 [email protected] wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Lofi has some interesting things to look at:  
>>> * GWT Awesome Library List (Gwit a LiLi)
>>> * there is also a boot starter for gwt, but I do not recall the name.
>>>
>>> Good starting points are:
>>> *  gwt-maven-archetypes: https://github.com/tbroyer/gwt-maven-archetypes
>>> *  https://github.com/NaluKit/gwt-maven-springboot-archetype if you 
>>> prefer Spring Boot on the server side: 
>>> https://github.com/NaluKit/gwt-maven-springboot-archetype
>>> * There is also are archetype creator from DominoKit
>>> * Nalu project generator: 
>>> http://www.mvp4g.org/boot-starter-nalu/BootStarterNalu.html (Disclaimer 
>>> I am the author)
>>>
>>> And a good place to ask your questions: https://gitter.im/gwtproject/gwt
>>>
>>> Hope that helps.
>>>
>>> [email protected] schrieb am Freitag, 18. Dezember 2020 um 02:01:24 
>>> UTC+1:
>>>
>>>> I am new here, so hello everyone.
>>>> I am very interested in this topic. I have gotten tired of the whole 
>>>> javascript ecosystem. I did not know that you could easily have GWT run 
>>>> only on the frontend and used jee/spring/whatever on the backend as you 
>>>> please. I always thought it was a client-server bundle.
>>>> Is there a tutorial that shows how it can be done?
>>>> How is the compilation speed for code-change/webpage-refresh? I have 
>>>> done scala many years, so I understand how frustrating it can be, even 
>>>> though scala is amazing.
>>>> Thanks
>>>> On Sunday, October 18, 2020 at 11:15:42 PM UTC+2 [email protected] 
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> On Mon, Oct 19, 2020 at 1:56 AM [email protected] <[email protected]> 
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Thanks Craig for the info...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I'm not familiar with React (only Hello World 😉)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Can you integrate React with these GWT React frameworks? So write 
>>>>>> your components in Java and integrate them back into React JavaScript?
>>>>>>
>>>>>>    - https://github.com/GWTReact/gwt-react
>>>>>>    - https://github.com/react4j/react4j.github.io
>>>>>>    
>>>>>> I don't know whether it is possible?
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> It may be possible in react4j to publish a java component as a react 
>>>>> component but not without significant overhead/boilerplate. It is also 
>>>>> possible to consume a js react component from within react4j with a 
>>>>> little 
>>>>> overhead and we built some of our early apps like this. However, 
>>>>> react4j's 
>>>>> sweet spot is when the majority of the application is written in java.
>>>>>
>>>>> With gwt-react it is much easier to both consume js components and 
>>>>> publish java components ... except for the normal constraints of 
>>>>> publishing 
>>>>> java to js. My guess is that the sweet spot for gwt-react is for 
>>>>> applications that combine js components into a java app but I have never 
>>>>> used it in anger.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> -- 
>>>>> Cheers,
>>>>>
>>>>> Peter Donald
>>>>>
>>>>

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