Yes, I currently use velocity. But i'd really rather just use a single
"language" for both web and non-web presentation.
On Fri, Jan 28, 2011 at 10:01 PM, Maurizio Cucchiara
wrote:
> Personally, I prefer velocity [1] or freemarker [2]. They have a good
> learning curve (especially velocity), they
On Sat, Jan 29, 2011 at 2:37 PM, Dave Evans wrote:
> Yes, I currently use velocity. But i'd really rather just use a single
> "language" for both web and non-web presentation.
>
Ew. IMO JSP is a poor general-purpose templating language, and makes less
sense for non-web presentation.
IIRC Musachy
Are you using this for generating emails from web applications? I developed
a tag library that allows you to generate text/html emails using JSP and it
works great with Struts/Tiles/Spring. (It would probably work with
Freemarker/Velocity as well, I've just never tried it)
(*Chris*)
On Sat, Jan
Would you like to elaborate on what makes it a poor general purpose
templating language? The el is easy to read and can handle nested
objects, arrays and maps. Most importantly, since I choose to use it
for my web presentation, I'd rather not have an entire other spec to
keep track of. Why bother?
I am using it primarily for emails, but I need to be able to call the
templatizing method from within a business layer class. Something
like:
Template template = new Template(path);
Map map = getDataForEmail();
String result = template.templatize(map);
On Sat, Jan 29, 2011 at 12:13 PM, Chris Pr
On Sat, Jan 29, 2011 at 4:49 PM, Dave Evans wrote:
> Would you like to elaborate on what makes it a poor general purpose
> templating language?
XML isn't a templating language, it's a data exchange format. XML is
human-hostile.
> The el is easy to read
The EL itself, maybe. JSP, not so much.
On Sat, Jan 29, 2011 at 2:01 PM, Dave Newton wrote:
> On Sat, Jan 29, 2011 at 4:49 PM, Dave Evans wrote:
>
> I am thinking about trying to duplicate/re-use/wrap/etc jstl in a
>> framework for use in a non-web templates, just trying to find out if
>> there is already work being done on this idea. M
I'd just search back through the list archives; I don't recall if it was in
user or dev. Around 2008-2009-ish (perhaps a smidge earlier?), Musachy was
the main driver, and I'm pretty sure he was using something out of Tomcat.
Dave
On Sat, Jan 29, 2011 at 7:17 PM, Dave Evans wrote:
> On Sat, Jan
Thanks for the suggestion. This is what I ended figuring out after I figured
out what date/time format my property of type java.util.Date would accept:
"/>
A ugly hack in order nest in the hidden field. If anyone know how
to do this properly just using
I would appreciate it.
Nick
On Sat
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