Peter,
How about you "teach me how to fish" or a partner effort or something
like that? Understand, I, or my systems programmers, have to get it
all going first on the i and I have to do the development squeezed among
my regular work. What do you say?
Thanks much,
Dave
"Peter Connell" <Peter.Connell@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> 8/8/2008 17:05
Dave,
It's my contention that Net.data is hard to beat as an easy to use, out
of the box (free) system i solution.
There is so much that can be achieved using a Net.data script without
ever having to compile custom programs in any language on the server.
But any solution can be made as difficult as you can make it depending
on the complexities of the requirements. However, as has been said, the
cleaner the design, the easier it is to later migrate any solution to
another, particularly if it employs SQL as a major component, as is
possible with Net.data. And Net.data can still make calls any of your
existing programs if need be.
For very little investment in time, the benefits of attempting simple
solutions via Net.data could mean this is not a risky strategy.
As a proponent, I am prepared to develop (for free) some ready to use
scripts for any project you wish use as a prototype
providing you supply some concise requirements. Perhaps then you could
come to your own conclusion.
Cheers, Peter
-----Original Message-----
From: web400-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:web400-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Dave Odom
Sent: Saturday, 9 August 2008 11:13 a.m.
To: 'Web Enabling the AS400 / iSeries'
Subject: Re: [WEB400]What'sthe latestthinking ofthe besttwo
orthreewebdevelopment languages/environ...
Too expensive when compared to DataQuant; not enough included. Done
my homework.
"Evan Harris" <spanner@xxxxxxxxxx> 8/8/2008 14:46 >>>
Look at iSeries access for web - it gives you stuff like spool files
out of the box.
-----Original Message-----
From: web400-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:web400-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Dave Odom
Sent: Saturday, 9 August 2008 6:43 a.m.
To: Web Enabling the AS400 / iSeries
Subject: Re: [WEB400] What'sthe latestthinking ofthe besttwo
orthreewebdevelopment languages/environ...
I only have to build some simple web pages that have menu items that
are invoked by number or button. These menu items will invoke system
commands or programs. The commands would be things like work with
spoolfile where the actual invoking userid would be different than the
user using the web app. This to prevent the user from having
anything
above user privileges when they need to look at spoolfiles created by
another userid that invoked the job creating those spoolfiles.
Again,
the programs being invoked would be some REXX, some CL/RPG and DB2
Query
Manger queries. The output from those queries would go to a file
which
can be accessed via DataQuant, their online query tool or to a
spoolfile
with they can look at with the function mentioned first. Something
like that.
Dave
Thorbjørn Ravn Andersen <thunderaxiom@xxxxxxxxx> 8/7/2008 23:16
Dean, Robert skrev den 08-08-2008 00:52:
I think your best bets are PHP or Java.
On Java, I would suggest JSF (because of similarity to ASP.net --
particularly when using IBM's tool), Grails, or Project Zero/WebSphere
sMash. (The last is a new product from IBM that promises rapid
development for Java, but it doesn't run on IBM i....actually, come to
think of it, it runs PHP, too).
On PHP, I would suggest going with the Zend Framework (free download
from Zend.COM).
It sounds to me as Java+bells and whistles may be overkill if Dave
just
need some scripting of an existing solution.
I'd have a look on which scripting possibilities the existing solution
has, and then consider how to invoke them.
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