Hi, first thanks for your fast reply. I think this should work. Perhaps I should just give more background information.
The App is build using the MVP Pattern. I have one "main"-Page, with 3 Panels (3 div-elements in the .html) Two of the three panels will never change during runtime. These contains the menu control-widgets. If i select something, then the "content"-Panel should load the requestet UI (Module). This means, it should load just a new MVP-View via a new MVP presenter. The views and presenters are seperated in extra Projects in Eclipse, just to make it easy to maintain the App. So I definitely don´t want anything in one Project, or any widget in one onModuleLoad(). I also don´t want lots of if´s to decide, which view should be shown, because the app must be highly maintainable, reusable and extensable. By-the-way, the way I do it, works, if I code it with many if´s. But I think this is a "dirty" solution, and not what I want. Thanks, for your suggestions anyway. Maybe you got asnother idea?? Thanks. Greets Alex On 16 Aug., 14:49, André Moraes <andr...@gmail.com> wrote: > This aproach will not work, since after compiled GWT generates pure > JavaScript. > > You could do the following: > > 1- Create an JSP page (index.jsp) and use this page as your GWT hosted page. > 2- When rendering the page, check the name of the module (not the name of > the class) that you want to load. > 3- Create one Module.gwt.xml file for each of the user interface that you > want to load. > 4- When renderinhg the script tag that loads your selection script, change > the name of your selection script based on the information that you > retreived from the datastore. > > This options generate lots of files in your GAE application, because each UI > will be compiled independ of another, but its fast. > > Another option will be: > > 1- Write your GWT application with all the UI and only one entry point > class. > 2- Create an jsp and define a cookie with the name (not the classname, GWT > doesn't have reflection) of the UI that you want to load. > 3- Inside your onModuleLoad function, write a series of if's that will check > this cookie and load the UI that you want. > 4- Use the GWT.async (code-splitting) to load the UI that you want, this > will cost another round-trip but will download much less code. If you don't > do that, the browser will download all the code for all the UI. > > Hope it helps. > > -- > André Moraes > Analista de Desenvolvimento de Sistemas > andr...@gmail.comhttp://andredevchannel.blogspot.com/ -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Google Web Toolkit" group. To post to this group, send email to google-web-tool...@googlegroups.com. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/google-web-toolkit?hl=en.