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Spring roo is new framework and I found it very interesting. I have been working on web application for last 3-4 years and Always found JSPs are hard to maintain across teams if everyone is not disciplined enough about separation of markup and serverside logic. I have used JackBe/BackBase in last projects and I enjoyed xml templates working as views. This was much better than JSPs. But I couldnt automate webtests through selenium for backbase.

I would be surely using Spring MVC (-view), Hibernate on the backend. I found Wicket as good alternative. Have you used wicket along with Spring and what was your experience?

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Despite all I've read on Roo, I still can't figure out what it actually is – skaffman Jul 10 at 7:10
What is the 'vs roo' part of the question? – Robert Munteanu Jul 10 at 7:35
Robert, I am noob on Roo Part and quite not sure why having roo as glue would help me beyond auto generating simple CRUD screens. And I couldn't find more documentation or examples apart from what we see on spring website and couple of blogs – Ketan Khairnar Jul 10 at 8:54

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Our current project uses Spring and Wicket, we have always used Spring but switched to Wicket a year ago. Few advices:

  • Get the "Wicket in Action" book.
  • The user mailing list is very helpful.
  • Make sure you understand Wicket's programming model especially the session serialization related stuff (the book does not help enough in this area IMHO).
  • Wicket is good at building stateful pages, it requires more work to build stateless pages.
  • There are some good UI widgets available like inmethod DataGrid.
  • It's easy to inject your Spring beans in your pages or components.

Spring Roo is still in beta (1.0 M2), so it may be a little early. We also considered Tapestry 5 but we thought it was a bit young a year ago.

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It completely depends on what your requirements are. If it's a small site then Component Oriented frameworks like GWT or Wicket are a must as they make things really easy.

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I was at the SpringOne conference in Amsterdam earlier this year when they announced Roo. My impression (and that of my colleague who was there) was that Roo was good if you were generating a web-based CRUD application every few weeks - they pitched it as the pure Java version of Grails (which is RoR for Java).

Didn't look interesting for anyone else - but that's just an opinion.

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