Here's how I solved it with JSNI:
public class AppLoader implements EntryPoint {
private String url, name, features;
public void onModuleLoad() {
initDownload();
Window.open(url, name, features);
}
private static void download(String arg) {
//The arg string now con
On Mar 11, 12:29 am, Anders wrote:
> Sorry, not for this one. The formpanel needs to be in a separate
> browser window. So I'm basically interested in knowing how to set the
> response target for a formpanel to be in another browser window (I
> would guess this needs some JSNI).
No need for JSNI
Uhm. Could you show me some code, please? Thanks!
On Mar 12, 3:57 am, Daniel Le Clere wrote:
> Umm... use common local storage under HTML 5 and have a change handle
> on the common dataset? yay?
>
> On Mar 11, 10:29 am, Anders wrote:
>
>
>
> > Sorry, not for this one. The formpanel needs to be i
Umm... use common local storage under HTML 5 and have a change handle
on the common dataset? yay?
On Mar 11, 10:29 am, Anders wrote:
> Sorry, not for this one. The formpanel needs to be in a separate
> browser window. So I'm basically interested in knowing how to set the
> response target for a f
Sorry, not for this one. The formpanel needs to be in a separate
browser window. So I'm basically interested in knowing how to set the
response target for a formpanel to be in another browser window (I
would guess this needs some JSNI).
--
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Does the form really need to be in a new window?
If not, want I would do is use a dialog box. You can set the
dimensions however large you need.
If would then be in the same window, when they press the submit button
it could send the result to the
server, and the callback function would be in the
Hey,
I'm working on an app where the user clicks on a link in browser
window A in order to open a new browser window B. In browser window B
the user fills out a form and submits this to the server. The response
is either an application/octet-stream (a binary file generated on the
server) or just t
Hey Roy,
> GWT *is* Javascript,
Yes, I know this.
> so if you can do it in JS, just write a GWT native method.
Understood
> Try Googling JSNI
This makes sense.
What I was refering to in Chris's post was this:
With javascript this is rather easy defining methods in the window or document
an
GWT *is* Javascript, so if you can do it in JS, just write a GWT native
method. Try Googling JSNI
2009/11/13 Angel Marquez
> Would you refer a site that does this with js.
>
> From what I understand you want to drag out a widget, say a text input
> field, and have a new window appear, similar t
Would you refer a site that does this with js.
>From what I understand you want to drag out a widget, say a text input
field, and have a new window appear, similar to when you drag out a url tab
in chrome. Then example would be able to input text into the primary window
that would appear in the se
It's easy to create a second browser using a Hyperlink or Anchor with target
= "_new" for example, but I think you are out of luck if you want them to
communicate. I could be wrong here -- perhaps someone else can confirm.
On Fri, Nov 13, 2009 at 7:56 AM, chris_wesdorp wrote:
> Hi,
>
> is it pos
Hi,
is it possible to control a second browser window via GWT? With
javascript this is rather easy defining methods in the window or
document and then call those? For GWT I asume I need to follow this
approach and write a wrapper class to call the native functions.
But what if I want to put other
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