On 4/5/06, Frank W. Zammetti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Wed, April 5, 2006 5:24 am, Mário Lopes said: > > Look guys, it was not of my intention to raise a flamebait. So please > > keep focused on the subject (please :-) and try to be factual, as it > > will help a lot. > > Yeah, I took the bait. My bad. Should have known better. See my > subsequent reply for the factual and hopefully helpful comments. > > > The project is a simple CRM with forms and AJAX. No big stuff, 6 > > database tables maximum. Also, we have a very short deadline (June), > > so we can't waste too much time learning the framework. > > Struts 1.x would likely be a good choice then. Most likely you will just > be using it in a basic way, which should be a relatively easy learning > curve. Webwork is in some ways simpler than Struts, so that's worth a > look too. It also has some built-in AJAX functionality already, and that > could be helpful. > > Because of your short deadline, JSF might also be a good choice *if* you > use something like Sun's Studio. That will hide most, if not all, of the > complexity from you, and let you just worry about your application rather > than the framework.
And how easy is it to use AJAX along with JSF? I don't have any experience with JSF but I've seen a friend of mine drag & dropping like in .NET. I'm not an apologist of WebForms. But if JSF eases AJAX I'll certainly consider it as a valid choice. Kind Regards, Mário Lopes > > > Kind Regards, > > > > Mário Lopes > > Frank > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]