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Jason Hunter

Jason Hunter is Principal Technologist with Mark Logic, specializing in large-scale XML content manipulation using XQuery. He's probably best known as the author of "Java Servlet Programming" (O'Reilly Media). He's also an Apache Member and as Apache's representative on the Java Community Process Executive Committee he established a landmark agreement allowing open source Java. He's publisher of Servlets.com and XQuery.com, an original contributer to Apache Tomcat (and Apache Ant committer), the creator of the JDOM open source project, a member of the expert groups responsible for Servlet, JSP, JAXP, and XQJ API development, and was recently appointed Sun Java Champion. In 2003, he received the Oracle Magazine Author of the Year award, and in 2005, the JavaOne Outstanding Talk award. His largest audience was 15,000 at a JavaOne conference keynote.

 

Jason Hunter's blog

Pop the Champagne: JDOM 1.0

Posted by jhunter on September 9, 2004 at 11:43 PM PDT

Pop the champagne! We just released JDOM 1.0.

Man this feels good. I'm gonna go out with some friends to party tonight, then heading to FOO Camp for the weekend. Ahh. A great moment in life.

It took four years to get here. We should have arrived three years ago. Beta 7 from the fall of 2001 was definitely worthy of being a 1.0 release. Stable, robust, useful. We just didn't call it 1.0 because there were some API changes we wanted to make that would break backward compatibility. We kept the Beta name not for the sake of quality but as a way to warn people about API shifts we saw coming. Was it right to wait? Perhaps not. We could have used 2.0 to indicate an API change like most commercial software.

The good news is we've made the API changes already, we've gotten them widely tested, and we're confident enough in this API that we don't see any reason to break backward compatibility in future releases. So if the Beta moniker kept you from JDOM in the past, it's time to jump on board.

Thanks to everyone who's been involved in the project over the years. It's been an amazing collaborative effort with people the world over contributing code and ideas. I've learned a lot, and met (virtually and in the real world) a lot of great people.

Sorry it took so long. You can't say I don't test my work, though!

Related Topics >> J2SE      
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