The objective of this project is to enable seamless integration between webMethods and the jasper intelligence suite. It allows pixel perfect reporting solutions with complex data integration requirements to be developed in minutes.
Swizzle started out as some stream-based parsing code I've had sitting around for quite some time. Once the project was established, it became my dumping ground for all things of a swizzling nature; poking at or mucking with unprocessed or unusable data. Generally, to swizzle unconsumable data into a consumable form.
Obba provides a bridge from spreadsheets to Java classes. With Obba, you can easily build spreadsheet GUIs (Excel or OpenOffice) to Java code. Its main features are:
* Loading of arbitrary jar or class files at runtime through an spreadsheet function.
* Instantiation of Java objects, storing the object reference under a given object label.
* Invocation of methods on objects referenced by their object handle, storing the handle to the result under a given object label.
* Asynchronous method invocation and tools for synchronization, turning your spreadsheet into a multi-threaded calculation tool.
* Allows arbitrary number of arguments for constructors or methods (avoids the limitation of the number of arguments for Excel worksheet functions).
* Serialization and de-serialization (save Serializable objects to a file, restore them any time later).
* All this though spreadsheet functions, without any additional line of code (no VBA needed, no additional Java code needed).
For a more detailed introduction see the Obba documentation
Components
Obba is small.
Obba for Excel consists of three files (these files will be installed by an an installer Install Obba for Excel.exe):
* Obba.xla: An Excel Add-in providing workbook functions like obMake(), obCall(), obGet().
* Obba.dll: The bridge from Excel to Java.
* Obba.jar: The Java object handler and the Obba control panel.
Obba for OpenOffice consists of one file:
* Obba.oxt: The Obba Add-in including the OpenOffice adapter and Obba.jar (the Java object handler and the Obba control panel).
JSF Flex goal is to provide users capability in creating standard Flex components as JSF components. So users would create the components as normal JSF components and the project will create the necessary SWC, SWF files and etcetera and link the values of the components back to the managed beans using JSON+Javascript and Actionscript. {standard Flex components has been open sourced through MPL license}
Currently many of the standard rich flex widgets (buttons, sliders, inputs [richTextEditor, textArea, ...], progressbars, colorpickers, various panels [accordion, tabBar, ...], and etcetera) have been written as intention of support.
How continuous is your integration and what could your team be doing to improve it? A JavaWorld excerpt from Continuous Integration: Improving Software Quality and Reducing Risk (Addison Wesley Professional, June 2007)
Aspose.Words enables .NET and Java applications to read, modify and write Word® documents without utilizing Microsoft Word®. Aspose.Words supports a wide array of features including document creation, content and formatting manipulation, powerful mail merge abilities, comprehensive support of DOC, RTF, WordprocessingML, HTML and PDF formats. Aspose.Words is truly the most affordable, fastest and feature rich Word component on the market.
Funambol is open source mobile application server software that provides push email, address book and calendar (PIM) data synchronization, application provisioning, and device management for wireless devices and PCs, leveraging standard protocols. For use