| Cheers Igor, that has really put things into perspective. The lack of decent documentation for Pico means that I have spent countless hours getting things to work the way I want. I suspect that I might switch to Spring when I get some time.
John. On 15 Jun 2006, at 13:17, Igor Vaynberg wrote:
On 6/15/06, Vincent Jenks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: I'm kind of glad we're having this discussion here - it's not really off-topic since I'm still half-wanting to be convinced that I could use Spring in this project :D why would you want to be convinced? :)
So, you're saying I don't *have* to wire classes together w/ XML in Spring but I could use GenericApplicationContext.registerBeanDefinition() programmatically instead? What are the drawbacks (besides the obvious - externalization.) none, its the same thing as the xml config, in fact thats probably what the xml reader calls.
I looked into Spring 2.0 yesterday shortly...it looks like they've done some work to be JPA (EJB 3 persistence) friendly...but I have to admit I really wasn't crazy about what I was seeing there - just "template" support for JPA. i dont know, i would use hibernate. it is evolving at a higher velocity then the spec and it has features i miss like the criteria api and custom types. the idea of running an application server just to get persistence sickens me. i havent checked out spring's jpa stuff either btw.
-Igor
_______________________________________________ Wicket-user mailing list
|
_______________________________________________
Wicket-user mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wicket-user