- templates are based on XHTML, therefore you can view them as-is in a web browser. All dynamic aspects of the view are inserted via the attribute
rsf:id
on standard XHTML elements. - is heavily based on Spring.
- is very modular and flexible, so you can, for instance, pick your favourite persistence mechanism; Hibernate, iBatis, etc.
Friday, 18 May 2007
Starting to look at RSF for web-pages.
I've been starting to look at RSF for those elements of Frockle that require a web-interface. There are various reasons why we are looking at using this framework. One of the main reasons is that it works well with Sakai, which Oxford will be using as it's institutional VLE within the next few years. As a framework for writing web-applications, I think it's pretty nifty. These are some of the key features:
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