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published 10 months, 4 days ago, submitted by ashmind 10 months, 5 days ago

weblogs.asp.net — ASP.NET MVC Framework described by ScottGu.

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No more viewstate? How are they going to handle server process recycling?
posted by yesthatmcgurk yesthatmcgurk 10 months, 4 days ago
"How are they going to handle server process recycling?"

Store your state in the db, cache or the web page form.
posted by gavinjoyce gavinjoyce 10 months, 4 days ago
Just like J2EE, php and any other does.
posted by simoneb simoneb 10 months, 4 days ago
It will work with VS2008 and will be integrated in .net 3.5 SP1.
posted by w3stfa11 w3stfa11 10 months, 4 days ago
Per Scott:

"Note that the MVC framework doesn't replace the existing Web Forms model - that will obviously continue to be fully supported and enhanced. So if you prefer the control postback interaction I'd probably recommend staying with that, and use a MVP based model for testability.

The MVC model does give you more control over the HTML that is rendered. As you noted above, this is both a good and bad thing (good in that you have more control, bad in that with more control you also need to take care of more things). We do provide a nice way to handle errors and maintain form state, so you don't have to write ugly code to handle that. The server control model also provides a clean way to encapsulate view-helper functionality in a nice way for your UI, and there will be a rich set of controls built-up to help with this."
posted by powerrush powerrush 10 months, 4 days ago
Thank you, Ruby On Rails, for making this trusted design pattern relevant to a vast number of web developers way before MS ever felt the urgency to provide it to us.
posted by jatco 6 months, 18 days ago



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