Scala supports functional programming.
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Steps to Configure Wowza and Create an Application - 0 views
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Spring to Java EE - A Migration Experience | OcpSoft - 0 views
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Does it all make sense now? Do you know how to solve every problem? Probably not, but when it comes right down to it, using Java EE can be even simpler than using Spring, and take much less time. You just have to find the right guides and the right documentation (which is admittedly a severe sore-spot of Java EE; the documentation is still a work in progress, but is getting much better, save blogs like this one.) You have to turn to a vendor like JBoss, or IBM in order to get the use-case driven documentation you need, and they do have documentation, it's just a matter of finding it. Seam 3 in particular strives to give extensive user-documentation, hopefully making things much simpler to adopt, and easier to extend. The main purpose of this article was not to bash Spring, although I may have taken that tone on occasion just for contrast and a little bit of fun. Both Spring and Java EE are strongly engineered and have strong foundations in practical use, but if you want a clean programming experience right out of the box - use Java EE 6 on JBoss Application Server 6 - JBoss Tools - and Eclipse. I will say, though, that the feeling I've gotten from the Spring forums vs the Java EE forums, is that there are far many more people willing to help you work through Java EE issues, and more available developers of the frameworks themselves to actually help you than there are on the Spring side. The community for Java EE is much larger, and much more supportive (from my personal experience.) In the end, I did get my application migrated successfully, and despite these issues (from which I learned a great deal,) I am still happy with Java EE, and would not go back to Spring! But I do look forward to further enhancements from the JBoss Seam project, which continue to make developing for Java EE simpler and more fun. Don't believe me? Try it out. Find something wrong? Tell me. Want more? Let me know what you want to hear.
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GAME OVER - Java Server Faces | ComeSolveGo - 0 views
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While you need basic functionalities, everything is fine. When you need to modify the component (which is configurable, right?) you are facing the problems
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EXTREMELY idiotic thing - because JSF has their famous lifecycle with lots of magic phases, some backing bean getters are called multiple times!
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JSF is submitting a form on itself so it could call a backing bean method to handle an event. Of course, if you have a request, there is unnecessary repeated initialization, getter calls, postconstruct etc
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Getting Started with RequestFactory - Google Web Toolkit - Google Code - 0 views
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Entity Proxies
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BigDecimal, BigInteger, Boolean, Byte, Enum, Character, Date, Double, Float, Integer, Long, Short, String, Void
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Methods that return a Request object in the client interface are implemented as static methods on the entity
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backing store (JDO, JPA, etc.) is responsible for updating the version each time the object is persisted,
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On the client side, RequestFactory keeps track of objects that have been modified and sends only changes
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automatically populates bean-style properties between entities on the server and the corresponding EntityProxy on the client,
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It is not necessary to represent every property and method from the server-side entity in the EntityProxy
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Java Developers Leery of IBM-Sun Merger - 0 views
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It would certainly bring us down to two major players on the Java side: IBM and Oracle.
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IBM likes to create these 'boil the ocean' kinds of solutions
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IBM could wind up having six different JVM [Java Virtual Machine] implementations
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Every time IBM has bought a company that was in a leadership position, that company seems to have lost market share
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Although many have lost faith in the JCP, this is one area where a new steward could really breathe new life into Java
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Developing Java Application using Couchbase - 0 views
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