I'm a C++ coder whoose boss needs him to go on a course to learn J2EE/JBoss for an upcoming project. The thing is, I'd much rather stick to C++ if I can - is there any feasible way of implementing typical J2EE projects in C++ instead of Java?
dont be an idiot. C++ has waay less capability and is waay slower to write code for than Java. Java gives you : slow, portable code with easily defined business logic and clear design, even if youre an idiot and is fine for 100% of all programmers even if theyre idiots.
C++ gives you : really fast, semi portable code with hacked on object support which can dissolve into a huge mess if youre an idiot, but otherwise is fine for the 10% of programmers who arent idiots.
by Anonymous Coward writes:
on Thursday November 06, 2003 @12:29PM (#7407681)
Use CCM. CCM is Corba Component Model. It's J2EE for other langaugages. That will give you EJB type functionality and JMS. It doesn't address any web related tech.
Hmm... (Score:0)
Re:Hmm... (Score:0)
Java gives you : slow, portable code with easily defined business logic and clear design, even if youre an idiot and is fine for 100% of all programmers even if theyre idiots.
C++ gives you : really fast, semi portable code with hacked on object support which can dissolve into a huge mess if youre an idiot, but otherwise is fine for the 10% of programmers who arent idiots.
For idiots, crunching out code and debugg
Re:Hmm... (Score:0)
I'll repweat the question - is there any feasible way of implementing typical J2EE projects in C++ instead of Java?
Re:Hmm... (Score:2, Insightful)
If you just need to create a webservice, then this (Axis c++) is all you need.
If you need your thing to run in an EJB or Servlet container, ie: your backend has to be J2EE, then you may be out of luck.
You might want to consider the course (if it's free!).
Re:Hmm... (Score:0)
Re:Hmm... (Score:0)