By: jkilgrow
Interesting list. I’m a little surprised that: 1. Seam made the list 2. JavaEE6 did not Still, an overall good blog post! If you don’t mind, I would like to reference this blog post in my blog.
View ArticleBy: Gökhan Ozar
Java EE 6 itself is not a framework, but a platform, for your information. Many features of Java EE 6, notably JSF 2 were inspired from what was achieved in JBoss Seam. The article was originally...
View ArticleBy: Gökhan Ozar
Yeah, I heard about the Play framework, too. I think Packt Publishing has recently released a book about it also.
View ArticleBy: enterm
After years of doing jsp/servlet development mostly using struts 1 and tiles, I ported most of my work to jsf and achieved high-quality products thanks to the wide-range of 3rd party components. Now...
View ArticleBy: Gökhan Ozar
Spring was recently the most used keyword accompanying java in the search trends recorded by Google. Spring’s AOP and advanced security and Seam’s interoperability along with its compliance with the...
View ArticleBy: Gökhan Ozar
In my opinion Seam-Spring integration is the best way to go, but if there’s no choice but a Seam-less scenario, then go for Seam with JSF integration…
View ArticleBy: lardi
Sorry to say so. But as far as I understand the recent articles I read about seam, it is a dead project. At least, there is no more development to make the framework evolve.
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