Home. 
.

transparent

transparent

transparent

Altova Mailing List Archives


RE: [xsl] [Announce] XX Framework Version 1.1 - XSL Centric Java Web Framework

From: "Michael Kay" <mike@------------>
To:
Date: 10/3/2006 12:46:00 PM
Looks interesting and potentially worthwhile. I'm surprised that it leaves
out XForms from the mix - any particular reason why?

Michael Kay
http://www.saxonica.com/
 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: David Moskowitz [mailto:dave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] 
> Sent: 03 October 2006 13:17
> To: xsl-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Subject: [xsl] [Announce] XX Framework Version 1.1 - XSL 
> Centric Java Web Framework
> 
> Hello everyone,
> 
> I am the developer of the XX Framework, which is an XML/XSL 
> oriented MVC Java web development framework. I've publicized 
> the framework mainly on the Java boards so far, but I think 
> it is perhaps more relevant for XSL users. 
> 
> Here is the standard release announcement. I invite everyone 
> to take a look at the framework at 
> http://www.xxframework.org/ and to provide feedback.
> 
> 
> Thanks
> --
> Best regards,
>  David                          mailto:dave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> 
> ________________________
> XX Framework Version 1.1 
> 
> Infoblazer LLC. is pleased to release the XX Framework under 
> the LGPL open source license. Version 1.1 is available for 
> immediate download. 
> 
> The XX framework is a configurable, XML/XSL-centric 
> implementation of the MVC development paradigm.
> 
> The primary goal of the XX Framework is to handle typical 
> application CRUD (create, retrieve, update, delete) with 
> little or no Java programming. Instead of telling the 
> application how to retrieve and how to display the data, we 
> configure what to retrieve (through XML) and what to display 
> (through XSLT). 
> 
> This approach generally leads to a simpler and more elegant 
> solution that a purely procedural approach. Where the 
> applications needs more than simple CRUD, additional business 
> logic can be easily incorporated into the process. Some 
> additional features of the framework are configurable data 
> caching, thread pooling, and web service integration.
> 
> Some benefits of the framework are:
>  
> Extremely simple to use
> Built around open web standards, including J2EE, XHTML, XML, 
> XSL, CSS Uses XSL and CSS as the application's View layer, 
> allowing total separation of presentation from back end 
> concerns. Page-focused/HTML templating approaches rarely 
> achieve this separation Configurable data caching for optimal 
> performance Automated data persistence (CRUD). 80% of a 
> typical web app can be built with no Java code Uses a 
> ?Portal-based? approach to page design, allowing easy 
> compartmentalization of functionality Integration with web 
> services Reuse common classes and operations for pre-built 
> functionality Enabled caching and thread pooling for greatly 
> increased performance
> 
> The framework promotes a use case oriented development 
> approach. In this approach, use cases are defined for each 
> task the user will perform. In general, each use case will be 
> implemented by a single logical servlet, as defined in the 
> J2EE Specification. The logical servlet may be implemented by 
> one or more implementation classes each implemented a 
> distinct portion of that use case and providing a portion of 
> the resultant display.
> 
> The developer simply needs to write implementation of for 
> these classes. Configuration files determine which 
> implementation classes are called based on user click events. 
> The most common implementation approach has each class return 
> an XML result, yielding a set of XML documents for each use 
> case.. XSL transformation is then applied to the XML results, 
> each transform providing a portion of the desired display. A 
> single JSP page is then used to display the final product.
> 
> The framework then builds upon this foundational approach to 
> provide automation of typical application tasks, such as add, 
> update, delete, select of records from a database. By 
> specifying a simple mapping from the HTML page on one end, 
> through the middle layers, and to the database on the other 
> end, a large subset of application functionality can be 
> achieved without the need to write any Java code. Instead, a 
> combination of XML configuration files, XSL transformation 
> templates, as well as open source tools, namely Hibernate and 
> Castor, are used.
> 
> The goal of the framework is to incorporate more and more 
> common programming tasks, in an open, configurable, and 
> generic manner. Furthermore, since much of the framework if 
> based on XML and XSL, automatic generation of complete 
> applications is achievable.
> ____________________________________________________________


transparent
Print
Mail
Like It
Disclaimer
.

These Archives are provided for informational purposes only and have been generated directly from the Altova mailing list archive system and are comprised of the lists set forth on www.altova.com/list/index.html. Therefore, Altova does not warrant or guarantee the accuracy, reliability, completeness, usefulness, non-infringement of intellectual property rights, or quality of any content on the Altova Mailing List Archive(s), regardless of who originates that content. You expressly understand and agree that you bear all risks associated with using or relying on that content. Altova will not be liable or responsible in any way for any content posted including, but not limited to, any errors or omissions in content, or for any losses or damage of any kind incurred as a result of the use of or reliance on any content. This disclaimer and limitation on liability is in addition to the disclaimers and limitations contained in the Website Terms of Use and elsewhere on the site.

.
.

transparent

transparent