| <article link="jet_tutorial1.html"> |
| <title>JET Tutorial Part 1 (Introduction to JET)</title> |
| <date>July 30, 2003</date> |
| <update> |
| <date>May 31, 2004</date> |
| <reason>for EMF 2.0 (Eclipse 3.0)</reason> |
| </update> |
| <category>Modeling</category> |
| <category>Tutorial</category> |
| <category>JET</category> |
| <category>EMF</category> |
| <author> |
| <name>Remko Popma</name> |
| <email>remko.popma@azzurri.jp</email> |
| <company>Azzurri Ltd.</company> |
| </author> |
| <description> |
| Generating source code can save you time in your projects and |
| can reduce the amount of tedious redundant programming. |
| Generating source code can be powerful, but the program that |
| writes the code can quickly become very complex and hard to |
| understand. One way to reduce complexity and increase |
| readability is to use templates. In this article you will learn |
| how to create JET templates, how to use the JET Nature and JET |
| Builder to automatically translate templates into Java classes, |
| and how to use these classes to generate source code. This |
| article also provides a short reference to the JET syntax. |
| </description> |
| </article> |