If you only need to get HTML on the client and not on the server-side,
then you may just use Tapestry's built-in logic for handling AJAX requests.
On the server side create eventLink:
Link link = resources.createEventLink(eventType, contextValues);
return link.toAbsoluteURI();
Pass this link to
Actually Lance's second approach is what I need to do. And yes it should be
very simple, I will only have to display regular html without controls at
all (Hopefully it will stay this way and I actually think it will)
Regards
On Wed, Jun 5, 2013 at 8:00 PM, Dmitry Gusev wrote:
> The entry point
On Wed, Jun 5, 2013 at 2:51 AM, Muhammad Gelbana wrote:
> 1. I hope this comment would be considered to solve that issue.
>
>
> https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/TAP5-1948?focusedCommentId=13675755&page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel#comment-13675755
>
> *2. I
Thanks Thiago...
The collection was always being populated. It still is nicely. There seems to
be some confusion on persisted form properties and ajax with regard to what the
grid is doing under the hood.
I failed to have a complete usable prototype by June 1st with
http://powerplayhockey.noip
The entry point is:
String rawAddress = renderer.render(new RenderEvent(
"internal/companyblocks", "companyAddress", company));
You tell here that onCompanyAddress method (or method with
@Event("companyAddress")) should be invoked on the internal/companyblocks page
class and if t
I think I need to understand how it's going to work before I go any further.
Here's one approach
1. The browser makes a request to the "other" webapp
2. The other webapp makes request(s) to the tapestry app
3. The other webapp merges it's own html with the tapestry html to create a
page
4. T
Honestly, I can't figure out anything from these 2 resources ! It all looks
so complicated to me.
@Dmitry
What is the entry point of your code ? When an ajaxrequest is sent to my
application, doesn't it reach your "CompanyBlocks" page ? Then when does
all the other services begin working ?!
@Lanv
You don't need the MapConfigService, you can use a serviceId (or a marker
annotation) to disambiguate your HazelcastConfigurer instances.
// serviceId = "mapConfigHazelcastConfigurer"
public HazelcastConfigurer buildMapConfigHazelcastConfigurer(final
Collection mapConfigs) {
return new Hazelcas
Thank you,
In my case, MapConfig contributions can be reduced to HazelcastConfigurer
contributions (and now I see I should have used the latter from the start)
so (to avoid many refactorings) I created another service that converts
MapConfig contributions to a HazelcastConfigurer.
public class Ma
On Wed, 05 Jun 2013 10:12:59 -0300, Muhammad Gelbana
wrote:
I can't remember the classpath entries generated by maven as I've
disabled maven dependencies but I remember seeing Apache "xerces" !
Weird. I've never seen it in a Tapestry project.
I guess maven just follow each dependency's d
I can't remember the classpath entries generated by maven as I've disabled
maven dependencies but I remember seeing Apache "xerces" !
I guess maven just follow each dependency's dependencies in it's pom and
downloads\includes it automatically. Whats weird is that tapestry's
downloaded jars and dep
Which libraries are being added which you consider useless? Don't forget
that dependencies may have dependencies themselves, so Maven (or any other
tool that handles dependencies) has to deal with that too. In Eclipse, in
the POM editor, there's a dependency graph you can check. Of mvn
dependency:t
I'm talking about the generated classpath. I understand from your answer
that this is not possible or should not happen ?
I guess these libraries are for maven's sake as you suggested.
Thank you.
On Wed, Jun 5, 2013 at 1:44 PM, Thiago H. de Paula Figueiredo <
thiag...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Are yo
Are you talking about any JAR downloaded by Maven or just the ones put in
the generated project classpath? If, for example, your .m2/repository
folder didn't exist or wasn't populated yet, Maven will download lots of
stuff used by itself.
On Wed, Jun 5, 2013 at 7:45 AM, Muhammad Gelbana wrote:
>
Why tapestry archtype project, when generated using maven and imported into
Eclipse, has much more dependencies than the ones separately downloadable
from tapestry's portal ?
1. I hope this comment would be considered to solve that issue.
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/TAP5-1948?focusedCommentId=13675755&page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel#comment-13675755
*2. In development mode, Tapestry monitors all assets that have been
exp
Tapestry has built in support for serving classpath assets.
http://tapestry.apache.org/assets.html
Option1
TML
Option2
Java
@Inject AssetSource assetSource;
public String getAssetUrl() {
return
assetSource.getClasspathAsset("regoznapp/enterprise/src/main/resources/return.txt",
n
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