| By Arthur Ryman | Article Rating: |
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| October 19, 2005 08:30 PM EDT | Reads: |
84,281 |
The standards arena is very active and as existing standards are revised and new standards defined WTP will support them based on their market relevance. There may also be a migration of de facto standards to the de jure quadrants. WTP's charter may expand in the future to include new sub-projects. However, immediately, WTP consists of the WST and JST sub-projects.
The WTP Ecosystem
WTP has the dual goals of providing both tools for the developer community and a platform for tool vendors to extend. Satisfying the needs of vendors requires that WTP define a set of platform APIs. The significance of a platform API is that it will be preserved in future releases. This means that a plug-in that runs in WTP 0.7 will also run - without recompilation - in future versions of WTP. The stability of platform APIs is key to vendor adoption. Clearly if WTP changed its APIs from release to release, vendors would expend significant effort reacting to the changes, and this would slow the rate at which users and vendors move to new versions of the platform.
WTP relies heavily on the user community for testing, bug reports, and enhancement requests, and the development of the user community is one of our main focuses this year. The WTP Web site has tutorials, articles, presentations, and event information. WTP will be well represented on the conference circuit this year. Look for upcoming WTP presentations at events such as EclipseWorld, JavaOne, and the Colorado Software Summit. There are also a couple of WTP books in the works. A thriving user community is a magnet for vendors. As the WTP user community grows so will the number of tools built on it.
Finally, WTP has a role to play in education. Since WTP is free Open Source and supports industry standards, it's an ideal learning tool for the coming generation of J2EE developers. I hope to see universities, community colleges, and even high schools use it for teaching.
The WTP contributor community is drawn from both vendors and users. There are many ways to contribute. You can start by downloading WTP, kicking the tires, and telling your friends about it. If you find a problem or have an idea, open a Bugzilla report. Monitor the newsgroup, and share your solutions to problems with others. If you can write, submit a tutorial or contribute to the online Help system. If you have fixed a problem, submit a patch. If you have time to work on WTP, check Bugzilla for open problems or look at the WTP Help Wanted page. And after you have established a track record of valuable contributions, you can be voted in as a committer.
What's Next?
WTP 0.7 is scheduled for release in July 2005. We are planning to follow that with WTP 1.0 later in the year. The focus of WTP 1.0 will be on the further development of platform APIs to enable the first wave of products based on WTP. Following that, WTP 1.5 will be released with Eclipse 3.2 in 2006. Candidate items for WTP 1.5 include support for revisions of major specifications such as J2EE 5.0, SOAP 1.2, and WSDL 2.0, as well as new JSRs and Web Service specifications.
We also expect the shape of WTP to change as new projects emerge and mature at Eclipse. New vendors are joining Eclipse and projects are being created at a rapid clip. For example, the data tools in WTP will move into a new Data Tools Project. Technology projects such as those proposed for EJB 3.0 and JSF will likely move into WTP as they mature.
A Final Word
Like all Open Source projects, the success of WTP depends on the contributions of an enthusiastic community. The project is still in its formative stage and there's much work to do. The project needs users, testers, writers, developers, speakers, trainers, mentors, evangelists, extenders, distributors, and leaders. If you are interested in J2EE development, then please consider this article as your formal invitation to join the WTP community.
Published October 19, 2005 Reads 84,281
Copyright © 2005 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
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More Stories By Arthur Ryman
Arthur Ryman is a Senior Technical Staff Member and Development Manager at the IBM Toronto Lab. He is currently the lead of the Web Standard Tools subproject of the Eclipse Web Tools Platform project. His previous development projects include Rational Application Developer, WebSphere Studio Application Developer, and VisualAge for Java. He is a member of the W3C Web Services Description Working Group and is an editor of the Web Services Description Language 2.0 specification. He is a co-author of the book, "Java Web Services Unleashed".
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obinna kalu 10/21/05 01:04:24 PM EDT | |||
Oh yes!!! The Eclipse WTP toolset has been such a fantastic breath of fresh air to the development of enterprise web applications for the java platform. I downloaded and trialed the version 0.7 stable release last July 2005,and I must say it was simply brilliant. Having wondered, in the preceeding months, where to find a good, non-commercial IDE for doing java web development and having been managing with sysdeo's tomcat plug-in and other plugins that do some quasi html/xml tag coloring, discovering WTP 0.7 was a big blessing. I look forward to versions 1.0 and subsequently 1.5 with great enthusiasm. |
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Eclipse News 10/19/05 08:39:49 PM EDT | |||
The Eclipse Open Source Integrated Development Environment (IDE) (see http://eclipse.org) is rapidly gaining popularity among Java developers primarily because of its excellent Java Development Tools (JDT) and its highly extensible plug-in architecture. Extensibility is, in fact, one of the defining characteristics of Eclipse. As the Eclipse home page says, 'Eclipse is a kind of universal tool platform - an open extensible IDE for anything and nothing in particular.' |
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Rui Wang 08/30/05 10:41:38 AM EDT | |||
Hello,sir.I'm a developer from China.I like your article.However,what does EDJ mean?I really don't know.Can you tell me?Thank you |
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Serge Baccou's Blog 07/21/05 06:04:48 PM EDT | |||
Trackback Added: Eclipse Web Tools Platform (WTP); Eclipse Web Tools Platform (WTP) extends Eclipse for web developments and/or J2EE developments. WTP is useful for people who develop web sites or J2EE applications using Eclipse. This note presents WTP but also talks about WST, JST, EMF, XSD, SDO, GEF ... |
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Eclipse News Desk 07/18/05 12:57:38 PM EDT | |||
Eclipse.Org Exclusive: Web Tools Platform And J2EE Development The Eclipse Way |
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Eclipse News Desk 07/18/05 09:32:44 AM EDT | |||
Eclipse.Org Web Tools Platform: J2EE Development the Eclipse Way. The Eclipse Open Source Integrated Development Environment (IDE) (see http://eclipse.org) is rapidly gaining popularity among Java developers primarily because of its excellent Java Development Tools (JDT) and its highly extensible plug-in architecture. Extensibility is, in fact, one of the defining characteristics of Eclipse. As the Eclipse home page says, 'Eclipse is a kind of universal tool platform - an open extensible IDE for anything and nothing in particular.' |
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