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On seeing that someone had developed a Grails Plugin for Vaadin (the former ITMill Toolkit, based on GWT as a front end technology), I immediately grabbed it and started exploring. One of the first things I do when developing things that look like GUI's is apply PureMVC to it. It's sort of like a big MVC switchboard that lets you hook together the smaller MVC's of whatever framework you're using. Overkill for really simple applications. Crucial for big ones.
Building a PureMVC app was pretty quick, but I ran into a small problem. Since PureMVC Multicore uses a Multiton pattern (essentially a map of Singletons), when Grails recompiles and restarts on code changes, the application barfs with a "Facade already constructed" runtime error. The solution is simple. In your subclassed org.puremvc.java.multicore.patterns.facade.Facade, change the following:
public static ApplicationFacade getInstance() { if (instance == null) { instance = new ApplicationFacade(CORE) } return instance }
to this:
public static ApplicationFacade getInstance() { if (instance == null) { // nuke the multiton so we can do the grails recompile if (ApplicationFacade.hasCore(CORE)) { ApplicationFacade.removeCore(CORE) } instance = new ApplicationFacade(CORE) } return instance }
And voila, your app now recompiles and runs without a hitch, just like a Grails app should. (CORE is a string constant to name your core.)
Related Services: Java Application Development, Custom Software Development
Topics: Ajax Frameworks, Google Web Toolkit, Grails, GWT, IT M, IT Mill Toolkit, PureMVC, Server Side, Vaadin
With the release of IT Mill Toolkit 5.3.0, the server-side RIA framework is now ready for production. I announced the initial release of 5.0 back in December of 2007. Since that time, IT Mill 5 has gone through several revisions and the release of GWT 1.5 (which means you can use Java 5 now on both the client and the server). As a reminder, server-side RIA frameworks let you write your app completely in the server and uses a client-side Ajax engine to render the interface. The nice wrinkle with IT Mill is that both the server side and the client side are written in Java, so if you want to add a component, you don't have to break out the JavaScript (see the extensive and high quality reference manual for details on how to develop your own custom components in GWT). If you're a Java shop, that's got to be a good thing.
Topics: Ajax Development, Ajax Frameworks, GWT, IT Mill Toolkit, Java, Server Side