Hi Salaboy,

Thanks a lot for directions.
I'm having a look at examples and slides but I'm afraid it will take me some time till I start to put all pieces of the puzzle together.

Cheers :)
Richard Gomes
http://www.jquantlib.org/index.php/User:RichardGomes
twitter: frgomes

JQuantLib is a library for Quantitative Finance written in Java.
http://www.jquantlib.com/
twitter: jquantlib

On 18/03/11 01:25, Mauricio Salatino wrote:
You are welcome.
Ping us in the user forum if you need more assistance. Or take a look at the examples that I'm creating here:
https://github.com/Salaboy/Drools_jBPM5-Training-Examples
Greetings.

On Thu, Mar 17, 2011 at 9:50 PM, Richard Gomes <rgomes1997@yahoo.co.uk> wrote:
Hi Salaboy,

Thanks a lot :)
Richard Gomes
http://www.jquantlib.org/index.php/User:RichardGomes
twitter: frgomes

JQuantLib is a library for Quantitative Finance written in Java.
http://www.jquantlib.com/
twitter: jquantlib

On 18/03/11 00:30, Salaboy wrote:
Hi Richard,
It sounds like you want to use the process engine without the bpm console and you want to create your own UIs to interact with your processes. 
If your processes include human activities you can use the human tasks Apis to create any type of ui you want, but the API is task list oriented.
If you don't want to use the human task API you can use the common engine API to interact.
Hope it help!
Greetings 

- Co-Founder @ http://www.jbug.com.ar
- Mauricio "Salaboy" Salatino -

On 17/03/2011, at 19:21, Richard Gomes <rgomes1997@yahoo.co.uk> wrote:

Hi jBPM developers,

Thank you guys a lot for jBPM5 !
I liked certain things... in particular BeanShell scripting.

Just a quick background about me:
I can call myself a Core Java developer with a lot of "random skills" spread from Assembly language to IBM/X10 ( http://x10-lang.org ), databases, etc, etc. With so many different skills (not being expert on nothing!), I'm trying to reduce the number of new things to be learned whilst playing with jBPM5 (and become non-specialist on even more things).

I'm not a web developer, definitely not. And I'm not planning to become one, in spite I understand I will have to have my hands dirty with GWT (or even Vaadin?) in future, at a certain point.

I'd like to have "kind of jbpm-console" but without the typical look and feel of a BPM console, I mean: without the Inbox and other queues, etc. Could you please give me some ideas and/or directions about this?

I think my process could run under a single user (from jBPM5 perspective).  Web users would authenticate at a certain point but I guess authentication could be stored internally as a variable (authenticated email address).

Any direction is much, much appreciated.

Thanks a lot and regards
-- 
Richard Gomes
http://www.jquantlib.org/index.php/User:RichardGomes
twitter: frgomes

JQuantLib is a library for Quantitative Finance written in Java.
http://www.jquantlib.com/
twitter: jquantlib
_______________________________________________
jbpm-dev mailing list
jbpm-dev@lists.jboss.org
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/jbpm-dev



--
 - CTO @ http://www.plugtree.com 
 - MyJourney @ http://salaboy.wordpress.com
 - Co-Founder @ http://www.jbug.com.ar
 
 - Salatino "Salaboy" Mauricio -