Hi Findlay
I think you should be more specific on what you want to do.
If Company is bean it  can be serialized but you should registor it with
a BeanSerializer in the client/Server.

regards
Srinath  
 
On Fri, 2003-09-26 at 23:20, Adhamh Findlay wrote:
> Hello,
> 
> I'm fairly new to this world of beans and serialization, so I need some help
> determining why a custom class would not be serializable.
> 
> 
> Here is what I get when I run SerializationTester:
> 
> Your class : [Company]
>   *** Can't get a serializer for 'Company' !! ***
>   ===> 'Not supported' or 'Wrong configuration' !!
> 
> Below is my the code for the Company class that I need to send over the
> wire.  It's pretty simple, so I'm clueless on this...  Any thoughts?
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Adhamh
> 
> 
> //Company.java class
> 
> public class Company implements java.io.Serializable {
> 
>     private String agmtNumber;
>     private String SAPMarketingPartNumber;
>     private String startDate;
>     private String businessName;
> 
>     public Company() {
>     }
> 
>     public Company(String agmtNumber, String sap, String startDate, String
> businessName) {
>         setAgmtNumber(agmtNumber);
>         setSAPMarketingPartNumber(sap);
>         setStartDate(startDate);
>         setBusinessName(businessName);
>     }
> 
>     public void setAgmtNumber(String value) {
>         agmtNumber = value;
>     }
>     public String agmtNumber() {
>         return agmtNumber;
>     }
>     public void setSAPMarketingPartNumber(String value) {
>         SAPMarketingPartNumber = value;
>     }
>     public String SAPMarketingPartNumber() {
>         return SAPMarketingPartNumber;
>     }
>     public void setStartDate(String value) {
>         startDate = value;
>     }
>     public String startDate() {
>         return startDate;
>     }
>     public void setBusinessName(String value) {
>         businessName = value;
>     }
>     public String businessName() {
>         return businessName;
>     }
> 
> }
> 

Reply via email to