For application development we use spring and hibernate. For rapid application development there are many pitfalls around. Our mission is to provide a framework that handles all default settings and allows us to quickly start with the development tasks our customers are interested in. So the framework tries to support you by:
* Providing a maven based development environment which uses a proven dependency configuration for fast composition of a working base setup.
* Several utilities were needed during application development extending functions from other utility libraries, e.g. Apache commons.
* Providing a module concept for easy setup and extension of a base application
* Providing reusable and extendable components for common tasks such as application setup, user management, security, history and reporting.
* Providing a base UI implementation based on JSF/MyFaces/MyFaces Trinidad
Where to start
For starting have a look at the quick start tutorial. Within this tutorial a small database application is developed using the most important features provided by the framework.
A new way to create interactive prototypes.
A screenshot of quplo
Write HTML? Design user interfaces? Tired of guessing what really works?
Using HTML, CSS, Javascript and our prototype markup language flow, you'll write interactive prototypes instead of static wireframes - producing better results, getting sign off faster, and making clients happier.
"A sandbox for collecting search examples, patterns, and anti-patterns. [...] Over time, I hope to add patterns that illustrate user behavior and the information architecture of search."
D. Bäumer, W. Bischofberger, H. Lichter, and H. Züllighoven. Proceedings of the 18th international conference on Software engineering, page 532--541. Washington, DC, USA, IEEE Computer Society, (1996)
M. Freiberg, and F. Puppe. Proceedings of the 8th Workshop on Knowledge Engineering and Software Engineering (KESE8), CEUR Proceedings (to appear), (2012)
S. Asur, and S. Hufnagel. Rapid System Prototyping, 1993. Shortening the Path from Specification to Prototype. Proceedings., Fourth International Workshop on, page 42 -56. (June 1993)