That sounds great Chris -- I'll give it a whirl tomorrow morning. -T
On Sun, Nov 15, 2009 at 9:22 AM, Christopher Brind <[email protected]>wrote: > I had an idea ... I'll just use a Graphics2D from a BufferedImage draw in > to > it, then copy the image data over to an SWT image and draw that on > screen... > then thought, I better check to see if anyone else had done that already > and > they had (probably better than I would have as well) : > > http://www.java2s.com/Code/Java/SWT-JFace-Eclipse/SWT2DUnicode.htm > > > > So after lifting that code and tinkering around, for your consideration, > here is version 0.0.1 of the Pivot WTKX Editor Eclipse plugin: > > > http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2451973/pivot/plugins/org.apache.pivot.wtkxeditor_0.0.1.jar > > It has a new file wizard and associates WTKX files to the WTKX editor. > > However, since WTKX's base type is XML (and I needed to use that > association > to get the code work) it may open the built in XML Editor. Simply close > this, right click on the WTKX file and choose Open With -> Pivot WTKX > Editor > and it should open an XML editor with 3 pages, the 3rd being 'preview'. > > Note that there's very little error checking going and it's basically > parsing your WTKX as you type. Once you hit preview it renderers your WTKX > *if it is valid* (my next task is to report errors). > > You will need to use *Eclipse 3.5* and have the *Web Standard Tools* > feature > installed (you can get this from the Eclipse update site : Help -> Install > Software... ). > > For quick installation, just drop it in to your eclipse/dropins folder and > restart Eclipse. If that doesn't seem to work, move it in your > eclipse/plugins folder. > > Obviously, there's lots of things still to do and that could be done with > this - all disclaimers apply! =) > > Also, I need to work out where to put the source and how to integrate it > with the build - if at all. > > Feedback, bug reports, suggestions, all welcome. :) > > Cheers, > Chris > > > > > 2009/11/15 Christopher Brind <[email protected]> > > > Thanks Todd, will give that a whirl later. > > > > On 15 Nov 2009 13:09, "Todd Volkert" <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > My guess is that it's because Button is an abstract class - try > <PushButton > > buttonData="Sumit" />. Also, I think you should be calling > > window.setContent(c) instead of window.add(c). > > > > Give those a shot, and hopefully it'll work - exciting stuff! > > > > -T > > > > On Sun, Nov 15, 2009 at 7:25 AM, Christopher Brind <[email protected] > > >wrote: > > > > > Typical - I just hit send and then I realise I can create my own > Graphics > > > 2D > sub-class and ju... > > > > >
