From: Joseph D. <jd...@ha...> - 2004-08-27 18:21:52
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I recently had reason to develop a new view type for Maverick, and wonder if there might be any interest in it. If so, perhaps I can contribute it back to the project. The problem: I needed a very simple X?HTML template system. It had to be something that, however, complicated under the hood, could be used by junior developers and design people. I also wanted the source pages to be valid XML, so that I could use the various XML tools to edit/process/test the pages. I wanted to avoid JSP's scriptlet syntax. JSTL might work, but I wanted the source pages to be valid XML, so I wanted to avoid stuff like <a href="<c:out value='...'/>"> ... </a> Basically, I wanted XML source files, with the ability to dynamically evaluate expressions and a some minimal amount of flow control. Looping, for sure. Conditionals, probably. Something to match the minimalist spirit of Maverick itself. Something that might look like this (with some of the namespace stuff cleared away): <html> <body> <h2>Welcome ${user.fullName}</h2> Your order contains the following items: <table> <ctl:for-each items='${order.items}' name='item'> <tr><td>${item.productId}</td><td>${item.description}</td></tr> </ctl:for-each> </table> the current time is ${util.dateTime} </body> </html> looks a bit like JSTL, but is required to be valid XML, unlike JSP+JSTL. I used OGNL for the expression language. The processing model goes like this: the "page description" (e.g. the above sample) is loaded once at app startup and parsed as a stream of SAX events. The events are recorded, and we do a certain amount of pre-processing, e.g. joining and "compiling" text nodes. Then, at request time we replay the event stream using a request specific "evaluation context" that contains things like the current request, the authenticated user, and some utilities. Maverick makes this pretty simple, because we can grab the "next transform step" in the view handler, and send the replayed SAX events on down the line. This means that any XSTL we might want to perform can be specified in Maverick's config, and will be handled completely by Maverick. Another nice thing about this is that unlike using JSP+XSLT, where the output of the JSP has to be re-parsed on every request, in my system the source is parsed exactly once. The strange thing about all this is that I wasn't able to find anything that quite suited my purpose. So I guess that's one purpose of this message: to see what I may have missed in the sea of Java webapp frameworks. The other purpose is to see if there's any interest in this. If not, then I must have missed something, because I've been quite pleased with the results. If so, then I can see about getting it cleaned up and put out somewhere for the Maverick community to have a look at. -- joe |