|
Re: Am I in the right track? [message #762058 is a reply to message #761894] |
Wed, 07 December 2011 13:48 |
Joe Pluta Messages: 62 Registered: November 2011 |
Member |
|
|
Hi Jan!
You may be confusing two different products: IBM's Rational Business Developer (RBD) and the Eclipse EGL Development Tools (EDT). Both can be used to develop EGL applications, but they are very different products.
RBD is part of the larger suite of IBM Rational products and does many things: in addition to developing Rich UI applications, it also builds thin client applications and it also is used as a target for people migrating from earlier products like VAGen.
EDT is the new, re-architected open source EGL tooling. Although it uses the same base language (EGL), under the covers a lot of things have changed. They did a great job of hiding most of the architectural changes, but there are syntactic and execution differences between the two tool sets. So, except for the simplest programs, in most cases an example designed for RBD won't work on EDT and vice versa. The EGL Cafe is currently geared toward RBD users, while this forum is specificlaly devoted to EDT.
So, your first task is to decide which tool suite you're going to use. From that point, folks can better direct your questions to the appropriate resources. Does that help at all?
|
|
|
|
Re: Am I in the right track? [message #762811 is a reply to message #762379] |
Thu, 08 December 2011 16:46 |
Dan Darnell Messages: 145 Registered: November 2011 Location: Arkansas |
Senior Member |
|
|
Jan,
Both products are suitable for developing rich web applications.
RBD is an IBM product you buy and, as such, it is formally supported by IBM. EDT is an OpenSource product and therefore supported by the OS community. If you are developing a commercial product you have to decide which model you are comfortable with...do you need guaranteed support from a manufacturer?
Also, EDT is literally just today (December 8, 2011) being formally announced in its version 0.7. The product is ready for prime time but it is going to continue to mature over time (the version number being pre-1.0 is not an accident). RBD is a product that has been around for many years and is a completely stable, mature product (again, formally supported by IBM) that you can bet your business on with confidence.
Also, as Joe pointed out, RBD has many features that you won't find in EDT (the audiences for the products are different). If you need to connect with so-called "legacy" platforms then RBD has all of the tools and connectors for doing so.
--Dan
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Powered by
FUDForum. Page generated in 0.03457 seconds