2010/11/23 Eden Cardim edencar...@gmail.com:
No, that's currently not possible with chained. Matt and I, howeever,
are working on a grammar-based dispatcher that will allow easy
expression of those types of constructs.
I would like to get more details about this.
Is it possible to get repo
On 23 November 2010 15:34, Oleg Kostyuk cub.ua...@gmail.com wrote:
$c-forward( $action [, \...@arguments ] )
As I think, $c-forward(user = [$c-user-id]) isn't one of them.
So, what this should mean?
$c-forward( $action [, \...@arguments ])
$c-forward( 'user' , [ $c-user-id ]
On Mon, Nov 22, 2010 at 6:15 AM, Matthew Braid catal...@mdb.id.au wrote:
Hi all,
Just wondering - is it possible for an action to have multiple chain paths?
I'd like my site to have a path like /user/N/profile (/user/N being a
chain path, /profile being an end node off that path), but also
On Mon, Nov 22, 2010 at 9:24 AM, David Schmidt davew...@gmx.at wrote:
On Mon, Nov 22, 2010 at 6:15 AM, Matthew Braid catal...@mdb.id.au wrote:
Hi all,
Just wondering - is it possible for an action to have multiple chain paths?
I'd like my site to have a path like /user/N/profile (/user/N
Matthew == Matthew Braid catal...@mdb.id.au writes:
Matthew Hi all, Just wondering - is it possible for an action to
Matthew have multiple chain paths?
Matthew I'd like my site to have a path like /user/N/profile
Matthew (/user/N being a chain path, /profile being an end node
Hi all,
Just wondering - is it possible for an action to have multiple chain paths?
I'd like my site to have a path like /user/N/profile (/user/N being a
chain path, /profile being an end node off that path), but also have a
path like /my/profile (where /my is a chain path that acts as if the