Have a look at mygwt (call gxt now). They use a nice MVC
On Oct 23, 7:09 pm, "yunhui song" <
songyunhui2...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi
>
> I have used Guice and Gin to implements MVC framework(like backend spring
> framework). By this way view(ui), event Listener and data
> access(xmlHttpReqeust wrapped by REST-GWT) can be seperated by three layers.
>
> Gin module used to initialize and couple all the instance used in the GWT
> module. It's a typicall Ioc container. I found it is rocking by this way in
> my project.
>
> Sammi
>
> On Thu, Oct 23, 2008 at 8:06 AM, Flemming Boller
> > On Thu, Oct 23, 2008 at 2:11 PM, marcelo melo <
marcelotm...@gmail.com>wrote:
>
> >> Totally agree with you... Simplicity is key most of the times (at
> >> least it should :) ).
>
> >> I have one question that is really annoying me. Having used it
> >> (puremv) with Flex, it is easy to fire an event at the View and
> >> associate it with a method at the Mediator. But, how to deal with it
> >> on GWT? I am adding the Mediator as the event listener of the View (by
> >> making it implement the relevant View listeners - ClickListener,
> >> etc.), but I'm not quite sure if it's the best way to do it...
>
> >> Any ideas?
>
> >> Thanks!
>
> >> On Thu, Oct 23, 2008 at 9:53 AM, Flemming Boller
> >> <
flemming.bol...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> > Yes I am. I think is it rather nice little MVC implementation, which
> >> has
> >> > made it more easy for us to make
> >> > components talk to each other in a loosely coupled way.
>
> >> > Minus is however, that it easy also to create a spider web of
> >> notifications
> >> > that is hard to overview.
>
> >> > But common sense and "keep it simple" should be used here :-)
>
> >> > /Flemming
>