Steve, That looks interesting. Can you give an example of where that might be useful or how you have used your "callover" tag? David -----Original Message----- From: Steven Morgan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, June 22, 2001 2:41 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Does anyone else have interest in this behavior? I needed a way to iterate over a set of files and values, so I wrote support for some tags that look like this: <target name="targetA"> <callover target="targetB"> <paramset name="param1"> <fileset dir="myDir" includes="*foo*"/> </paramset> <paramset name="param2"> <valueset values="x|y|z|abc" delimiter="|"/> </paramset> </callover> </target> <target name="targetB"> <echo message="${param1} : ${param2}"/> </target> myDir contains the files bar1, bar2, foobar, foo1, and foo2. When the above is run, the result is: targetA: targetB: [echo] foo1 : x targetB: [echo] foo1 : y targetB: [echo] foo1 : z targetB: [echo] foo1 : abc targetB: [echo] foo2 : x targetB: [echo] foo2 : y targetB: [echo] foo2 : z targetB: [echo] foo2 : abc targetB: [echo] foobar : x targetB: [echo] foobar : y targetB: [echo] foobar : z targetB: [echo] foobar : abc So the callover tag provides enumerated values to specified variables in calls to another target in the file. Useful mainly for single sets of values because otherwise it can get unwieldy (n*m combinations). Since I found this to be amazingly useful, I decided to ask if anyone else thinks the same. If so, I could package up the code and put it out. -Steve Morgan [EMAIL PROTECTED] __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get personalized email addresses from Yahoo! Mail http://personal.mail.yahoo.com/
