Java Today |
 |
JavaFX interactive shell
For playing around with JavaFX, A. Sundararajan points out the availability of a JavaFX interactive shell: "JavaFX compiler has a built-in script shell - Per Bothner has implemented a read-eval-print loop facility for JavaFX. The script shell class is com.sun.tools.javafx.script.ScriptShell.
Note:This is in the openjfx-compiler repository and not in the JavaFX 1.0 binary."
New JCP JSR Status: Inactive
The Aquarium points out a New JCP JSR Status: Inactive, which the JCP has applied to "non-final JSRs that have not posted a milestone within the last 18 months." Eduardo Pelegri-Llopart notes, "The JCP pages have already been updated; check out the JSRs by Stage and the full list of Inactive JSRs. The list includes JSRs led by large and small companies, Sun and non-Sun. Some of the JSRs are very old, some just break the 18-month boundary."
Swing 2: P-----g in the Wind
Seemingly picking up the mantle of angry and indecent commentary where the Bile Blog left off, Elliott Hughes takes on the recent call for a cleaned-up Swing 2 in his blog Swing 2: P-----g in the Wind [title redacted]. "Nothing in the current "Swing 2" plan has any real value to the developer of Swing applications, or to the developer's users. It doesn't make existing stuff any easier to write. It doesn't make existing stuff work any better. It doesn't make it possible to write stuff you couldn't write before." Read on for Elliott's analysis of what he thinks Swing really needs, and how much of that might actually be coming.
Weblogs |
 |
JAX-WS RI 2.2 Status
Its been a long time I blogged. You might be wondering what we are up to with JAX-WS RI lately. We are busy implementing the JAX-WS 2.2 RI. —
Rama Pulavarthi
Atmosphere: state of the union
The goal of Project Atmosphere is to bring Comet to everyone, everywhere. What the status of the project? Read on... —
Jean-Francois Arcand
Hexagonal tile map
To supplement the posts about the triangular and square tilings, let's consider the third type - the hexagonal tiling. This is my favorite one. Each hexagon has more non-diagonal neighbors than a square. It simplifies calculating distance between two tiles. The main disadvantage of this tiling is that the axes are not orthogonal. —
Sergey Malenkov
Forums |
 |
Re: Architecture: WSIT Integration into Metro
The Metro processing tubeline is based on the chain of filters/ interceptors design pattern. Still, it is orthogonal to the notion of JAX-WS SOAPHandler. Metro processing tubeline is the heart of "streamlined" SOAP message processing concept in Metro. As such it is a Metro-specific implementation detail and has no connection to JAX-WS API or specification. To dive a little deeper, one of the tubes which is a part of the Metro tubeline is a HandlerTube which is responsible for invoking registered JAX-WS SOAPHandlers. So basically all JAX-WS handler processing takes place at one single predefined place in the whole Metro tubeline. You can view JAXWS handlers as a high-level and portable API for processing SOAP messages, while Metro tubes are non- portable, low-level (but very flexible and powerful) SOAP message handlers/processors. —
Re: GlassFish Cannot Find SFSBs After a RuntimeException
This is the spec-defined behavior for stateful session beans. Each injection of a stateful session bean reference results in a new stateful session bean identity. Here, the "client" is the servlet instance itself, of which there is typically only one per web application. If the bean instance throws a runtime exception the container must destroy it, which means any other invocations on its reference will result in NoSuchEjbException. This is one reason it's not recommended to inject a stateful session bean into a servlet instance.
—
v3 and NetBeans 6.7 M2
Folks may know that the NetBeans project just published version 6.7 Milestone 2 which is available here: https://bits.netbeans.org/download/6.7/m2/. Folks may not know that it is easy to start doing Java EE 5 development against recent v3 promoted builds by using the information that you can find here: https://blogs.sun.com/vkraemer/entry/7_0_and_glassfish_v3. Please give it a try. —
