On Sun, 09 Sep 2012 09:56:26 +0200, Casper Bang <
caspe...@gmail.com>
wrote:
I like this analysis, but it's incomplete from my point of view. The
criterium I use to distinguish web frameworks that I might like or not is
the presence or absence of push updates. Actually, when you write "the web
consists of a server delivering content to a client", the problem is that
it often does with a pull approach, which to me imposes too severe
limitations to design, as harmful as those unnecessary life-cycle
complications etc... Of course the web 2.0 can do pushes with different
implementations, that I don't care of and I dont' want to care of. I want
my framework to support it. From this point of view GWT is superior, but
with the cited cost of development complexity. Vaadin is an excellent
trade off (the cost to pay is to accept client-server interactions for
almost everything you do in the client). If you want push updates, a
(glorified) servlet is not enough.
--
Fabrizio Giudici - Java Architect, Project Manager
Tidalwave s.a.s. - "We make Java work. Everywhere."
fabrizio...@tidalwave.it
http://tidalwave.it -
http://fabriziogiudici.it