Actually, I was a bit mistaken. You do not need to use the privileged keyword. Aspects can advise private members of a class or other aspect. Privileged means that they can also access private members. Probably not necessary in this case.
On Fri, Sep 5, 2008 at 2:36 PM, Andrew Eisenberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Are you trying to advise a private method on JFrame? If that's the > case, then you need to use the "privileged" keyword on your aspect. > You also need to add the SWT library onto your inpath. By putting > something on your inpath, all of its class files are woven with all > your aspects. The resulting code is placed in your out folder. > > On Fri, Sep 5, 2008 at 2:05 PM, Megaman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >> Hi everyone, >> Like i said before, i'm new in aspectj. I trying to add funtionality to a >> GUI with an aspect and i can't find the way. >> I'll be more specific: I have a simple GUI written in swing and i would like >> to add a button to it with and aspect. >> Suppose i have a class that extends JFrame and it has JButtonslike instance >> variables. >> the JFrame has a private method it called initComponents(), where adds all >> the buttons that it has like instance variables to the contentPane. >> I put a Pointcut in that method, but i don't know how to do it. >> Somebody know how? >> Thanks! >> -- >> View this message in context: >> http://www.nabble.com/Add-functionality-to-GUI-with-AspectJ-tp19339493p19339493.html >> Sent from the AspectJ - users mailing list archive at Nabble.com. >> >> _______________________________________________ >> aspectj-users mailing list >> aspectj-users@eclipse.org >> https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/aspectj-users >> > _______________________________________________ aspectj-users mailing list aspectj-users@eclipse.org https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/aspectj-users