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<title>overview</title>
<author email="erik@brakkee.org">Erik Brakkee</author>
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<body>
<section name="Introduction">
- <p>The general support library contains various smaller utilities that
- can be useful for any java project. I started this in 2005 when I realized that it
- would be very nice to have a support library readily available instead of having to
- cut and paste from old code.
- </p>
- <p>
- There are many purposes for this documentation:
- </p>
- <ul>
- <li>To allow others to use this library.</li>
- <li>To allow myself to use the library(!). This is because I have written a lot of stuff in the
- past and need to make sure I have good enough documentation describing what I have made and
- how to use it. </li>
- <li>To document the current state of development. In particular, some parts may be deprecated because of
- other developments).</li>
- <li>To allow extension of the library.</li>
- </ul>
-
- </section>
- <section name="Philosopy">
- <p>
- Some parts in the utilities library may seem familiar to users of
- other popular frameworks such as <a href="http://www.springframework.org">Spring</a> and
- <a href="http://code.google.com/p/google-guice/">Guice</a>. This
- is not always a coincidence. It is my view that Spring is just another IOC framework and
- that there can be many IOC frameworks. Also, the support that one actually needs to develop
- applications and in particular enterprise applications efficiently only requires a few basic
- support utilities and typically not a big framework.
- </p>
- <p>Apart from this, there are many other
- interesting developments going on:
- </p>
- <ul>
- <li><em>Java EE 6 dependency injection:</em> Java EE 6 provides a powerful dependency injection framework called
- <a href="http://jcp.org/en/jsr/summary?id=299">Contexts and Dependency Injection (CDI)</a>, that
- contains a lot of experience from proven frameworks such as Spring and Guice. In
- particular, I think CDI can be viewed as a standardization of Guice (although some people
- might disagree). This, in effect,
- should make anyone think twice before depending heavily on a 3rd party IOC framework
- instead of using CDI.
- </li>
- <li><em>Lightweight component technologies:</em> Integration of lightweight component technologies such as <a
- href="http://www.osgi.org">OSGI</a> and Java EE is under way
- which will also shift the balance. In effect, the enterprise spec for OSGI was released
- March 23rd 2010 and Glassfish V3 is already partly using it. </li>
- </ul>
- <p>
- In particular, I believe that Java EE 6 with new powerful concepts such as singleton beans,
- lifecycle management, Contexts and Dependency Injection, and Enterprise OSGI will provide
- the most powerful way to develop applications in the future. In this. I am making only an
- exception for web frameworks to which I think JSF is not a good solution. I would use
- <a href="http://wicket.apache.org">Wicket</a> anyday if it's up to me.
- </p>
-
+ <p>The general support library contains various smaller utilities that can be useful for any
+ java project. </p>
</section>
+
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