Nathan,
It appears that you're now considering a move to SPAs, which are more
client-centric than what you have traditionally done using ASP.Net. That
in and of itself would introduce another way of developing web and mobile
applications.
Actually, SPAs are already here. We now have a warehouse application that's an SPA.
I think we will probably use both SPAs and traditional server-side web applications going forward.
Thanks,
Kelly
-----Original Message-----
From: WEB400 [mailto:web400-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Nathan Andelin
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2015 12:21 PM
To: Web Enabling the IBM i (AS/400 and iSeries)
Subject: Re: [WEB400] Single Page Applications
The question I'm being asked is why would we want to have two ways of
developing web and mobile applications?
The reasons are probably similar to the ones that prefaced the choice to deploy 2 disparate technology stacks in the first place. You've already selected 2 distinct server operating systems, databases, virtual machines, language environments, skill-sets, etc.
It appears that you're now considering a move to SPAs, which are more client-centric than what you have traditionally done using ASP.Net. That in and of itself would introduce another way of developing web and mobile applications.
FWIW, I'm considering the same thing. We already have a server-centric approach. Should I introduce a client-centric one too?
Some factors I'm considering - how best to support both desktop and handheld devices? How best to streamline development? Would it be feasible to reduce the amount of code required? Would client-centric improve the user experience; would the UI be more responsive?
Regarding the question of streamlining development and reducing coding requirements, that get's back to the idea of using "utilities". We talked about a server-based utility a week ago. Angular now interests me in that it includes a utility which automatically merges HTML templates like:
http://www.radile.com:9220/rdweb/phones/details.html
With JSON objects like:
http://www.radile.com:9220/rdweb/phones/details.json
A utility "injects" the merger into a portion of a page; nice!
Under a traditional server-centric web application, a fair amount of coding would be required to "map" data to HTML, using templates. What if that could be replaced by a utility?
In summary, you might consider multiple approaches in order to reduce future code requirements, improve the user interface, improve performance, take advantage of platform specific features, reduce future maintenance requirements, adapt to handheld devices, etc.
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