Thanks for the reply Martin. I bought the 2nd edition actually about 9 months ago, and have been slowly working through it in my 'free time'... I have written a couple of small examples using that hibernate integration code, but I was concerned that, being an example, it wouldn't scale too well for a public website. Please note that I have nothing to ground my fears on except experience from basing (non related) things on examples in the past.
Where I worked previously, we had a sort of persistence engine which wrapped a lot of the boilerplate code, but I don't have access to that now... I was hoping there might be a tidy way of accessing hibernated objects via hivemind (for example). Thanks Gareth ----- Original Message ---- From: Martin Strand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: Tapestry users <users@tapestry.apache.org> Sent: Wednesday, 22 November, 2006 6:33:00 PM Subject: Re: Using Hibernate as the persistence engine If you can get Kent Tong's book for Tapestry 4, it has an excellent example of simple Hibernate integration. Martin On Wed, 22 Nov 2006 18:47:45 +0100, Gareth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi, > > I've written a Tapestry front end, that talks to a series of in memory > data objects that essentially mock DB tables, but would now like to > integrate this with a database via hibernate. I'm using Tapestry 4.1, > and since this is a green field development, the latest version of > Hibernate. > > I've seen reference to Tapernate, and HoneyComb... > > What is the recommended approach for this? > > Thanks > > Gareth --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Send instant messages to your online friends http://uk.messenger.yahoo.com --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]