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Vaadin, Maven and Spring « about:software development - 0 views

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    Vaadin is a Rapid Application Development (RAD) framework for RIA applications. I only know it for a few months but since I started experimenting with it, I'm really in favor of it. I see a lot of advantages compared to Sun's Java EE standard front-end framework JSF. First of all Vaadin is a java library, so you only have to write Java to build a complete frontend. No need for a specific frontend language, no need for converters (for comboboxes),… This also implies that you can use the full Java power on the frontend side and that's an huge advantage because frontend code is now type-safe and easily refactorable. You can unit test your frontend with JUnit. You can also use all existing java libraries on the frontend side, for example LOG4J. Another advantage is the fact that Vaadin is easy to learn (JSF isn't!) and to use: it's straigtforward. It feels like developing desktop apps and for me developing desktop apps feels much more intuitive than developing web-apps the way I'm used to. Vaadin uses convention over configuration. No need to register new components, validators or whatever in different xml files. themes have a default folder and a default folder structure. Vaadin is very well documented. there's the book of Vaadin wich explains every aspect of the framework very clear. On the site there's a blog, a FAQ section, a wiki, a forum, examples with Java source code, … It's very easy to extend. Want to create your own Validator? Just implement an interface or extend another Validator and use it. Want to create your own custom server side component? Just extend the CustomComponent class or extend from another component. there's also an add-on directory where you can download UI components, data components, tools, themes, …
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Groovy vs. Scala - We Need a Closure… « GridGain = Compute + Data + Cloud - 0 views

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    There was a recent outburst in blogs on The topic of Groovy and how it compares to Java. Although I respect The youthfull entusiasim of Groovy and Co. working on this little exercise I'm just perplexed by The "WHY?" in this whole discussion. Let me just say again: W H Y ?!?! 1. Practically no one cares about Groovy (let alone Groovy++ strap-on) beyond Grails community. So this language just as "widely accepted" as Ruby (at least for enterprise software development) 2. If you know Java it's equally "challenging" to pick up eiTher Groovy or Scala. Don't let anyone insult your intelligence by claiming that Scala syntax is somehow more complex than Groovy. In both languages you will need to adapt to functional thinking - and that's where you will have to spend a couple of weekends… 3. If you know Groovy - you already know 90% of Scala (different syntax and few extra features can be picked up in The evening) 4. Scala is designed by people who have proper academic background, experience and talent in The area of language design - Groovy has never been that way (and anyone who dares to look inside of Groovy runtime or history of changes in it will attest to that). NOTE: it did come out raTher strong - but that's how I feel about it and after some thinking I'll leave as is. Nothing personal to anyone reading it… 5. Scala as a post-functional language is years ahead of Groovy (static typing with best-in-business type inference, highly tuned mix of imperative and functional styles, powerful and done-right generics, etc.) 6. Groovy will ALWAYS be slower than Scala or Java (latest benchmarks put even Groovy++ about 50 times slower than Java) just by its nature unless someone changes The language and rebuilds The runtime from The ground up. 7. Once we get decent integration with Eclipse, NetBeans and IDEA for Scala, The Groovy will lose its only serious advantage
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RAP/BIRT Integration - Eclipsepedia - 0 views

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    "Besides a rich user interaction many applications need to display a big amount of data sets as diagrams or reports as part of their applications. In order to bridge the gap the BIRT project was created as part of the eclipse ecosystem. BIRT is an open source Eclipse-based reporting system that integrates with your Java/J2EE application to produce compelling reports. That BIRT integrates well with classic RCP applications is a well known fact. But the need for rich internet applications is still growing. And here the RAP comes into play. As a platform for developing Web 2.0 applications with the same patterns as for RCP it paves the way for single sourcing applications running on both platforms. In this talk we will show how to integrate diagrams and reports known from BIRT into RAP applications. Topics covered include how to setup the environment to let BIRT and RAP play well together. In addition we will give advices how to use the reports inside RAP applications and which problems may arise. As a final outcome of we will know everything to bring reporting capabilities into RAP applications. "
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How-To: Setup an ERP with Openbravo - 0 views

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    "Businesses involve a lot of functions and in any company, large or small, dedicated departments handle the functions assigned to them. This compartmentalization ensures that experts in the respective domain handle things efficiently. But as the company grows there arises a situation when too much time and resources are wasted when each of the departments carry out functions that are redundant. For example, it is too expensive when both the purchase team and the warehouse management team maintain the same list of products but each in their own format. That may be a tiny part of how Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) can help you avoid redundancies to run an efficient business. Based on the size of the company and requirements, ERP packages are available from a few thousand to millions of dollars. Today we'll check out how to set up Openbravo, a modern and professionally backed open source ERP that is cost effective to acquire, operate and upgrade."
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Remus Information Management - 0 views

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    Remus Information Management. It is a free OpenSource client application for the management of information with a connection to multitude of data repositories and a desktop-integration for an optimal usage for the offline management, visualization and easy accessibility of information to the user. the biggest efforts are the linking of information throughout different repositories, the offline storage, the clean representation and the fast search through the information.
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Apache Camel: Index - 0 views

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    "Apache Camel is a powerful open source integration framework based on known Enterprise Integration Patterns with powerful Bean Integration. Camel lets you create the Enterprise Integration Patterns to implement routing and mediation rules in either a Java based Domain Specific Language (or Fluent API), via Spring based Xml Configuration files or via the Scala DSL. This means you get smart completion of routing rules in your IDE whether in your Java, Scala or XML editor. Apache Camel uses URIs so that it can easily work directly with any kind of Transport or messaging model such as HTTP, ActiveMQ, JMS, JBI, SCA, MINA or CXF Bus API together with working with pluggable Data Format options. Apache Camel is a small library which has minimal dependencies for easy embedding in any Java application. Apache Camel lets you work with the same API regardless which kind of Transport used, so learn the API once and you will be able to interact with all the Components that is provided out-of-the-box. Apache Camel has powerful Bean Binding and integrated seamless with popular frameworks such as Spring and Guice. Apache Camel has extensive Testing support allowing you to easily unit test your routes. Apache Camel can be used as a routing and mediation engine for the following projects: * Apache ServiceMix which is the most popular and powerful distributed open source ESB and JBI container * Apache ActiveMQ which is the most popular and powerful open source message broker * Apache CXF which is a smart web services suite (JAX-WS) * Apache MINA a networking framework"
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ModeShape - JBoss Community - JCR 2.0 (JSR-283) implementation that provides access to ... - 0 views

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    ModeShape (formerly "JBoss DNA") is a JCR 2.0 (JSR-283) implementation that provides access to content stored in many different kinds of systems. A ModeShape repository isn't yet another silo of isolated information, but rather it's a JCR view of the information you already have in your environment: files systems, databases, other repositories, services, applications, etc. To your applications, ModeShape looks and behaves like a regular JCR repository. Using the standard JCR API, applications can search, navigate, version, and listen for changes in the content. But under the covers, ModeShape gets its content by federating multiple back-end systems (like databases, services, other repositories, etc.), allowing those systems to continue "owning" the information while ensuring the unified repository stays up-to-date and in sync. ModeShape repositories can be used in a variety of applications. One of the most obvious ones is in provisioning and management, where it's critical to understand and keep track of the metadata for models, database, services, components, applications, clusters, machines, and other systems used in an enterprise. Governance takes that a step farther, by also tracking the policies and expectations against which performance can be verified. In these cases, a repository is an excellent mechanism for managing this complex and highly-varied information. But a ModeShape repository doesn't have to be large and complex: it could just manage configuration information for an application, or it could just provide a JCR interface on top of a couple of non-JCR systems.
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Mashup Server by WSO2 - Open Source Mashup Server for easy Web service composition and ... - 0 views

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    "A hub for integrating your enterprise with the rich information available on the Web, the WSO2 Mashup Server leverages popular Web 2.0 formats and protocols into your service platform. Combining simple yet rich mashups with reusability, security, reliability, and governance, the WSO2 Mashup Server includes features for connecting Web Services to humans through Web pages, gadgets, feeds, instant messages, email and more. the WSO2 Mashup Server offers: Go Cloud-Native WSO2 Mashups as a Service gives you instant self-service provisioning, multi-tenancy and has built-in monitoring and metering capabilities. Increase productivity Reduce cost Gain more control Avoid vendor lock-in the ideal platform for defining composite services for user interfaces and mobile applications. A simple way to deploy services developed in JavaScript. Access to REST and WS-* web services, feeds, and scraped web pages with data scripted together quickly using common Web developer skills, the result being a new service, or a web page, gadget, email or instant message. the ability to secure hosted Mashups. Support for both recurring and longer-running tasks and service lifecycles. Monitoring, configuration of security and quality of service settings such as throttling. With no up-front license agreements or subscription fees, getting started with the WSO2 Mashup Server requires less developer effort, ensuring faster ROI."
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JDBCRealm in GlassFish : Shing Wai Chan's Weblog - 0 views

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    JDBC realm has a lot of attention in recent months. This blog summarizes the evolution of the JDBC realm implementation in GlassFish and explains how the latest implementation works. I would like to thank Jean-Baptiste, and Richter for their contributions and comments. the participation from the open source community definitely helps everyone. I encourage all of you to give feedback, participate, and help evolve this feature further. GlassFish always had the capability for anyone to plug-in a realm. Implementing a custom realm in the Sun Java System Application Server EE 8.0 is described in the article Authentication Using Custom Realms in Sun Java System Application Server. In S1AS 7.x, there is a JDBC Realm bundled in sample. Jean-Baptiste formally filed an enhancement and provided a clear text version of JDBCRealm for GlassFish. Richter wrote another implementation because the GlassFish JDBCRealm at that time not compatible with Tomcat.
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Getting Started with #Xtext DSL with syntax highlighting editor, part 2 - Peter Friese - 0 views

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    "Let's imagine we want to create an application for orders. People can sign in to the system, place orders for various items, check out and have them sent to their address. Very simple, but we can show a lot of things here. As we expect to be writing more than one application of this type and as we also would like to be able to express the structure of the application on a business level (one of the major drivers for DSLs and MDSD for that matter), we come up with the idea of using a DSL to describe what the application does. Defining the DSL is what we did last week. This week, we need to map the concepts of the DSL to some code and some APIs we're going to program against. So, we're going to create a set of code templates for a code generator that can then read our DSL models and create persistence code for us."
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UNICASEClient - unicase - A unified CASE tool. - Project Hosting on Google Code - 0 views

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    UNICASE is a CASE-Tool integrating models from the different development acitivities, such as requirements, use cases, UML models, schedules, bug and feature models into a unified model. This unified model is highly traceable by design. the UNICASE client allows to view and edit these models in a textual, tabular and diagram visualization. the models are stored and versioned on a server comparable to svn but customized for models. Client and server are easily extensible to support integrating new models into the unified model. UNICASE is based on the Eclipse platform including EMF and GMF. It can also be used as a framework to build modeling applications that reuse its repository and visualization capabilities. the project is open-source and released under the Eclipse Public License v 1.0 (EPL). It builds on our experience from the Sysiphus project in building a CASE tool.
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On the Job: the Eclipse 3.0 Jobs API - 0 views

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    "This article looks at the new Jobs API available as part of Eclipse 3.0. It describes the main portions of the Jobs API and the use of scheduling rules. It also describes some changes to Eclipse resource management including how the Resources plug-in integrates with the new API. Finally, it describes some new UI functionality that has been added to provide feedback to users about jobs that are run in the background. "
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scalaz - Scalaz: Type Classes and Pure Functional Data Structures for Scala - Google Pr... - 0 views

shared by Hendy Irawan on 16 Jun 11 - Cached
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    "Scalaz is a library written in the Scala Programming Language. the intention of Scalaz is to include general functions that are not currently available in the core Scala API. the scalaz-core module depends only on the core Scala API and the core Java 2 Standard Edition API. Scalaz is released under a BSD open source licence making it compatible with the licence of the Scala project. Scalaz 6.0.1 was released in June 2011, targeting Scala 2.8.1 and 2.9.0.1. "
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ICEpdf - Open Source Java PDF, Java PDF Viewer, Java PDF Rendering, Java PDF Extraction - 0 views

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    "Contributed and administered by ICEsoft Technologies Inc., ICEpdf.org is a place where enterprise Java developers can learn, share, and contribute information and ideas to a growing community of ICEpdf developers. ICEpdf is an open source Java PDF engine that can render, convert, or extract PDF content within any Java application or on a Web server. ICEpdf.org provides a range of development and support resources to benefit all ICEpdf developers. Source code and application reference implementations are available for download here. Numerous reference implementations and examples are available to enable rapid learning and successful use of the product. the reference implementations are commercial quality implementations that can be deployed as-is, customized to meet specific requirements, or used as learning aids on how to use various features. Visit the ICEpdf demos page to see ICEpdf in action and to evaluate the capabilities of ICEpdf as a Java PDF viewer or deployed as servlet a headless server engine. Remember that ICEpdf is completely customizable and and can be completely embedded in your Java application. We invite you to join the ICEpdf community and to participate in the user forums. the resources available here and on the ICEpdf forums will get you up and developing that much quicker. "
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Quercus - PHP Runtime for Java JVM - Caucho Resin : Reliable, Open-Source Application S... - 0 views

shared by Hendy Irawan on 11 Jul 11 - Cached
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    "Quercus is Caucho Technology's 100% Java implementation of PHP 5 released under the Open Source GPL license. Quercus comes with many PHP modules and extensions like PDF, PDO, MySQL, and JSON. Quercus allows for tight integration of Java services with PHP scripts, so using PHP with JMS or Grails is a quick and painless endeavor. With Quercus, PHP applications automatically take advantage of Java application server features just as connection pooling and clustered sessions. Quercus implements PHP 5 and a growing list of PHP extensions including APC, iconv, GD, gettext, JSON, MySQL, Oracle, PDF, and Postgres. Many popular PHP application will run as well as, if not better, than the standard PHP interpreter straight out of the box. the growing list of PHP software certified running on Quercus includes DokuWiki, Drupal, Gallery2, Joomla, Mambo, Mantis, MediaWiki, Phorum, phpBB, phpMyAdmin, PHP-Nuke, Wordpress and XOOPS. Quercus presents a new mixed Java/PHP approach to web applications and services where Java and PHP tightly integrate with each other. PHP applications can choose to use Java libraries and technologies like JMS, EJB, SOA frameworks, Hibernate, and Spring. This revolutionary capability is made possible because 1) PHP code is interpreted/compiled into Java and 2) Quercus and its libraries are written entirely in Java. This architecture allows PHP applications and Java libraries to talk directly with one another at the program level. To facilitate this new Java/PHP architecture, Quercus provides and API and interface to expose Java libraries to PHP. the Quercus .war file can be run on Java application servers such as Glassfish, i.e. it can be run outside of Resin. This .war file includes the Quercus interpreter and the PHP libraries."
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MultiTail lets you view one or multiple files like the original tail program - 0 views

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    "MultiTail lets you view one or multiple files like the original tail program. the difference is that it creates multiple windows on your console (with ncurses). It can also monitor wildcards: if another file matching the wildcard has a more recent modification date, it will automatically switch to that file. That way you can, for example, monitor a complete directory of files. Merging of 2 or even more logfiles is possible. It can also use colors while displaying the logfiles (through regular expressions), for faster recognition of what is important and what not. It can also filter lines (again with regular expressions). It has interactive menus for editing given regular expressions and deleting and adding windows. One can also have windows with the output of shell scripts and other software. When viewing the output of external software, MultiTail can mimic the functionality of tools like 'watch' and such."
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Grep Console allows you to define a series of regular expressions which will be tested ... - 0 views

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    "Developers usually have their programs write log and debug information to the standard output during coding and testing. This results in a lot of text being printed to Eclipse's console view, often more than can be easily surveyed. Since at any given time, only a small part of this information is of primary interest to the developer, a tool which highlights specific lines or words can significantly increase the readability of this output. Grep Console allows you to define a series of regular expressions which will be tested against the console output. Each expression matching a line will affect the style of either the entire line or parts of it. For example, error messages could be set to show up with a red background, or integer values showing the state of a certain variable could be rendered in bold font. "
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Expression Language - The Java EE 6 Tutorial - 0 views

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    "This chapter introduces the Expression Language (also referred to as the EL), which provides an important mechanism for enabling the presentation layer (web pages) to communicate with the application logic (backing beans). the EL is used by both JavaServer Faces technology and JavaServer Pages (JSP) technology. the EL represents a union of the expression languages offered by JavaServer Faces technology and JSP technology."
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OTHowtos/Compiling With Ant - Eclipsepedia - 0 views

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    " Should you need to compile an OT/J program outside the OTDT, the following steps should enable you to use ANT for this task: download ecotj.jar you'll always find the latest version here in the column "Command Line Compiler" add it to your ANT runtime classpath (either place it in your ant_lib directory or provide the path by a -lib command line option to ant). in your build.xml set the property build.compiler to use the OTDT compiler in tasks, like that: "
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Java EE 6 and Scala » Source Allies Blog - 0 views

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    Last weekend while pondering the question "Is Scala ready for the enterprise?" I decided to write a simple Java EE 6 app entirely in Scala, without using any Java. I had three main reasons for doing this: one was just to see how easy/difficult it would be to write everything in Scala (it was easy).  Another was to document the process for others journeying down the same road (the entire project is on github).  Finally, I wanted to identify advantages of using Scala instead of Java that are specific to Java EE apps (I found several). Background the specific app I created was an adaptation of the Books example from Chapter 10 of Beginning Java™ EE 6 Platform with GlassFish™ 3. It's a simple web app that displays a list of books in a database and lets you add new books. Although it's a pretty trivial app, it does touch on several important Java EE 6 technologies: JPA 2.0, EJB 3.1 and JSF 2.0.
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