Installing JSP isn't impossible, but it can be a true pain... At least on
windows... There are lots of environiment variables to set (well, two at
least), config files to edit, a directory structure to understand (this is
probably way simplier than I currently think it is)... However, once you get
Tomcat running, it's quite easy to just install mod_jk to Apache and
configure it some, then you are set... I think...

AFAIK, Java is nicer when you like objects... PHP is more procedual... Some
people like objects, some like them in small scales and some people hate
them... I like objects as long as not _everything_ are objects like in
javascript... Although, now that I understand it, I like them more than
before (a number is a number for me, meaning it shouldn't have methods)...

Something more to think about is Aspects... I read somewhere that they are
the future, although, I didn't understand a word about what they are...
"Jean-Christian Imbeault" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> skrev i meddelandet
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Joel Rees wrote:
> >
> > You might want to look around the jakarta projects and ask questions on
> > some of those mailing lists.
>
> Thanks for the advice. I'll try that. But I *would* like to hear the
> opinions of PHP'ers too. I'm worried that by asking people on that list
> Ill get one-sided views.
>
> What do PHP people who've tried jsp or struts think?
>
> > (tomcat is an open source java server that can be used with or without
> > apache, and struts is an application framework.)
>
> The jsp'ers that I talked with could not stop praising struts ... which
> is what got me interested in finding out more and maybe even switching.
>
> I just hope that if I do decide that struts are worth the switch the
> learning curve isn't too steep. Or the installation curve also since I'm
> the lone sysadmin too ...
>
> Thanks,
>
> Jean-Christian Imbeault
>



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