<p>Ill grant you that!!!</p>
<p>Lincoln Baxter's Droid<br>
<a href="http://ocpsoft.com">http://ocpsoft.com</a><br>
<a href="http://scrumshark.com">http://scrumshark.com</a><br>
Keep it simple.</p>
<p><blockquote type="cite">On Jan 18, 2010 11:40 PM, "Cay Horstmann" <<a href="mailto:cay@horstmann.com">cay@horstmann.com</a>> wrote:<br><br><p><font color="#500050">On 01/18/2010 10:46 AM, Lincoln Baxter, III wrote:
</font></p><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex"><p><font color="#500050">>
>
> PS. As a side-note. I've updated the Tutorial on
> <a href="http://www.javaserverfaces.org/getting-started">www.javaserverfaces.org/getting-started</a>
</font></p>
<<a href="http://www.javaserverfaces.org/getting-started" target="_blank">http://www.javaserverfaces.org/getting-started</a>> to reflect the<p><font color="#500050">
> Development ProjectStage in web.xml. So by default, people following the
> getting-started tutori...</font></p></blockquote>
<br>
(That's get-started, not getting-started.)<br>
<br>
In a modern app server, you don't need to use any web.xml. You could tell people to install GlassFish and deploy a directory containing nothing but<br>
<br>
index.xhtml<br>
next.xhtml<br>
WEB-INF/classes/org/javaserverfaces/Hello.class<br>
<br>
No Maven, no XML. Now that's an OOBE :-)<br>
<br>
Cheers,<p><font color="#500050">
Cay
--
Cay S. Horstmann | <a href="http://horstmann.com">http://horstmann.com</a> | mailto:<a href="mailto:cay@horstmann.com">cay@horstmann.com</a>
</font></p></blockquote></p>