My Take:
Click - Came about because of a perception that early versions of 
Tapestry were a little confusing and the fact that everyone wants to 
make their own framework.  Although Click still pushes it's early 
feature of ease of use, this is no longer the case when compared to 
other frameworks.  Tapestry has now moved on significantly with 
usability being one of the major changes and has added many new features 
such as the built in AJAX in 4.1.
Wicket:  A more widely known framework,  a bit like a more mature 
Click.   Very similar to Click with more features and  a larger support 
community.  Both of these mean more testing and maturity.   Anyone 
looking at Click for the html components in code way of doing things  
would do better using Wicket.
Tapestry:   Mature, feature rich and Apache supported.  Anyone that can 
use Java has no problems with Tapestry.  Quite easy to use and in the 
future moving towards having more annotations in code which some say 
increase usability.  Personally I think it just clutters things.   
Changes in versions reflect the needs of users.   Things such as an 
increased ease of use for new users have been put in past releases,  
current releases are focusing on AJAX integration while future releases 
continue to work on ease of use among other things.
Swing with Cayenne ROP:    My personal favourite in the last few months 
for quick internal CRUD applications.  Gives all the advantages of a web 
application with instant AJAX,  a quick WYSIWYG interface builder using  
netbeans and Matisse and all the advantages of a native application.  
Start the application with java web start to make deployment and update 
easy, create an exe file or just start with a batch file over the 
network.  Works well in an environment where you can control java 
installed versions.   Managing the different classes and class names on 
the client and server can be a pain until you have deployments scripts 
worked out but there is hope this might get better into the future. The 
next version of Java is reported to have major advances in Java Web 
Start as well.
Anyway .... I thought this was a Cayenne list anyway .. not a Click 
pushing list.
Andrus Adamchik wrote:
> Congrats to Malcolm and the Click team!
>
> Click is indeed the easiest-to-use web framework on the market. Hope 
> that the final release, implying stable status, will lead to much 
> wider adoption.
>
> Cheers,
> Andrus
>
>
> On Oct 4, 2006, at 11:59 PM, Malcolm Edgar wrote:
>> Hi All,
>>
>> Click Framework 1.0 is now available.
>>
>> For the list of changes please see:
>>
>> http://click.sourceforge.net/docs/roadmap-changes.html
>>
>> This release includes a number of new Cayenne examples.
>>
>> www.avoka.com:8080/click-examples
>>
>> regards Malcolm Edgar
>>
>
>
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