| By Brian Walsh | Article Rating: |
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| September 13, 2006 01:00 PM EDT | Reads: |
32,119 |
Since GI is a view technology, it makes sense to start our GI integration here at the view resolver.
Any Ajax implementation makes certain demands of the server. A key pre-requisite is a structured message. GI, like most Ajax libraries, is highly optimized around this concept (though GI also provides a less optimal means to consume and display server generated chunks of HTML as well). Therefore we need Spring to produce a simple, consistent XML payload.
Spring makes our life easy in this regard. Spring can chain view resolvers, passing the requested view to a series of resolvers until it one responds with a view that can render the model. Our first change will be to add a XMLViewResolver. The XMLViewResolver is a Spring provided class that reads a configuration file of view names that we want rendered into XML.

The views.xml configures our view implementation, a single class that renders xml.

Our system now looks like this...

Published September 13, 2006 Reads 32,119
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More Stories By Brian Walsh
Brian Walsh is the founder of bwalsh.com, a Portland, Oregon consulting firm specializing in Internet and network-enabled product strategies and development. His areas of expertise include enterprise architecture, technical evaluations, infrastructure, software engineering and database design. Walsh's recent clients belong to a wide variety of industry segments; retail banking, insurance to telecos and network management firms. Always enjoying the hands-on approach, he divides his time between policy issues and technical challenges.
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n d 09/13/06 01:14:24 PM EDT | |||
Ajax(Asynchronous JavaScript and XML) means many things to many people. However, one thing is certain: To users it implies a higher level of functionality and an improved experience. To the developer, another certainty follows: More work. The only question is how much work and to what end. |
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