no job so far compares to this i get paid everyday with this program i know
that your efforts are going to pay off im so excited to receive my first pay
check http://www.b2cnbc3y.com/
Thank you, I tried to take code from AjaxLink - the same result:
public abstract class PropertyCheckBox extends CheckBox {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;
public PropertyCheckBox(final String id) {
this(id, null);
}
public PropertyCheckBox(final String i
It seems AjaxCheckBox doesn't support that out of the box.
Create a RFE in Jira.
In the meantime you can create your own component that supports that.
See how AjaxLink delegates the behavior call to its own
#getAjaxCallDecorator()
On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 9:16 PM, javax wrote:
>
> Hi, I'm trying
Hi, I'm trying to call javascript function on AjaxCheckBox selection.
Tried both in 1.4 and 1.5 by overriding protected IAjaxCallDecorator
getAjaxCallDecorator()
This approach works well for AjaxLink and AjaxButton, but for AjaxCheckBox
execution even not arrives to
decorateScript(Component comp
Hi Per, you can use the AjaxLazyLoadPanelTester
there is an example at:
http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/wicket/releases/wicket-1.4.14/wicket-extensions/src/test/java/org/apache/wicket/extensions/markup/html/AjaxLazyLoadPanelTesterTest.java
On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 5:07 PM, Per Newgro wrote:
> H
Hi *,
i try to get it for hours now, but i can't.
I have a page with an AjaxLazyLoadPanel on it. The lazyLoadComponent on
it is a simple panel.
Everything works as expected.
But if i start my unit test (wickettester.startPage) the content panel
is not exchanged. All i get is the lazy load pa
Peter,
That worked great!
For mine, I added a test for even number of segments like so:
List segs = request.getUrl().getSegments();
if (segs.size()%2==1)
segs.add("0"); // maybe throw exception instead?
String[] named = segs.toArray(new String[segs.size()]);
Hi,
I've played with the encoders, and currently this is what I'm using:
https://gist.github.com/717942
It isn't really tested out, but did the job for a quick look :)
Hope this helps
Regards,
Peter
2010-12-22 18:23 keltezéssel, Jim Pinkham írta:
In my 1.5-M3 app's init, I've got:
/
In my 1.5-M3 app's init, I've got:
// this part works fine, just wanted to show where the comes
from below...
getRootRequestMapperAsCompound().add(customHomeMapper);
getRootRequestMapperAsCompound().add(
new MountedMapper("/statement", StatementPage.cl
There is the setModelValue(final String[] value) not deprecated.
you can also do:
CheckBoxMultipleChoice c;
((Collection)c.getDefaultModelObject()).addAll(c.getChoices());
On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 2:25 PM, eugenebalt wrote:
>
> Is there an easy way to select all/clear all checkboxes in
> Check
Use of all of the fancy database features, such as :
fine grained auditingsqltracevirtual private database / fine grained access
control
all hinge on the database's ability to know who's logged in at any given time
... which isn't possible with the 'one big application user' architecture.
> Da
Is there an easy way to select all/clear all checkboxes in
CheckBoxMultipleChoice?
My Model of that field is an ArrayList.
I wish there was a method called "setModelValue(..)" where I could set the
string "0;1;2;3;4;5;6;..." to select all the values, but it's deprecated.
--
View this message i
Hi Brian
you're absolutely correct - I should have had the foresight to see that despite
being fond of it, Gradle is still a niche product & that Maven is a popular,
well supported build tool.
I actually swapped to Gradle from Maven not long back, so I have now included
my pom.xml for Maven. Yo
Issue created:
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/WICKET-3278
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/WICKET-3278
--
View this message in context:
http://apache-wicket.1842946.n4.nabble.com/DropDownChoice-no-selection-value-tp3160661p3160849.html
Sent from the Users forum mailing list archive
I tested and it replaced the file.I saw the temp folder, the filename was the
same what the user uploads.
User1 file was replaced by user2 file.
when user1 saved the file it saved the wrong file.
Please suggest me solution for this ?
--
View this message in context:
http://apache-wicket.18429
It looks like a bug.
Please file a ticket.
On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 2:51 PM, hok wrote:
>
> Hello,
> I've noticed that the method
> AbstractSingleSelectChoice.getNoSelectionValue() returns the value for no
> selection. However in AbstractSingleSelectChoice.getDefaultChoice(final
> Object selected
Are you using "mock objects" to get the database (it won't really come
from the database when mocking of course) information in your test
cases?
On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 9:22 AM, lchalupa wrote:
>
> Hello:
> I am developing a spring/hibernate wicket application where I can configure
> the componen
Hello:
I am developing a spring/hibernate wicket application where I can configure
the components on each page at runtime. The component configuration specs
are kept in the database. For example the home page has no components in it
when it is created on the file system. When the home page is in
Hi Andra
No no, that label is just to demonstrate my the effect that the Label
works as expected but the message not. The thingie
works without a label at all.
I just don't know if it's even intended to be used like that and if yes,
if my observations are correct and this is a bug
Matt
On
Hi Matthias,
I think that label should go inside wicket:message tag, i. e.
Hi
I just disovered by chance that it's possible to use property
expressions in normal elements which then
get resolved against the next model found in the hierarchy.
Unfortunately it seems to work a bit differ
Hello,
I've noticed that the method
AbstractSingleSelectChoice.getNoSelectionValue() returns the value for no
selection. However in AbstractSingleSelectChoice.getDefaultChoice(final
Object selected) on line 314:
return "\n" + option +
"";
and on line 296:
buffer.append(" value=\"\">")
Hi
I just disovered by chance that it's possible to use property
expressions in normal elements which then
get resolved against the next model found in the hierarchy.
Unfortunately it seems to work a bit different to other automatic
resolving like in new Label("property").
Example:
I've got
Application security is crucial, but in my opinion it's no less important to
have security around the data itself as well.
These guys could have saved themselves from trouble by putting some security in
the db ...
http://www.computerweekly.com/blogs/public-sector/2007/09/npfit-security-warning-a
Hi Martijn,
as a disclaimer, I do make my living based on my Oracle knowledge, but don't
think that I am blindly devoted. They have failed the market in many ways. I'm
very fond of postgresql and the approach I take to development with that DB is
very similar to the one I take with Oracle.
I di
Funnily I did recently get certified as an Oracle DBA (for what that's worth!)
but actually I'm a developer who has got more involved in the dba stuff over
time, mainly because of the performance problems suffered by various employers.
I'm a fan of Tom Kyte's writings (eg
http://asktom.oracle.
On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 10:55 AM, Andrew Hall wrote:
> One of the motivations behind this was to find out what was involved in
> creating an application broadly consistent with the recommendations of
> the Oracle Security Guide (see
> http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/E11882_01/network.112/e1654
Hi,
> Does that mean that the number of open connections always equals the> number
> of signed in users?
Not necessarily - it depends on the way that you build it - using oracle proxy
users
(http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/E11882_01/network.112/e16543/authentication.htm#sthref402)
means
Not only that, but fine-grained data access allows a user to simply
"select * from some_table" and get the data to which they are allowed
access. E.g. each sales person can see the data for their region
while an administrator or manager can see all of the regions.
You can also build 6 apps that w
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