the tld files are under the WEB-INF directory of your web app. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Daniel Grey" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Struts Users Mailing List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Friday, January 03, 2003 10:43 AM Subject: RE: (http://jakarta.apache.org/struts/tags-tiles-1.1) cannot be resolved
I just looked in the struts.jar and the tiles.jar and they both have a META-INF/struts-tiles.tld. Problem is that I inherited this monstrosity of files, jars, jsps etc. It feelss like 20,000 leagues under the sea... Thanks mucho -----Original Message----- From: Craig R. McClanahan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, January 03, 2003 10:28 AM To: Struts Users Mailing List Subject: RE: (http://jakarta.apache.org/struts/tags-tiles-1.1) cannot be resolved On Fri, 3 Jan 2003 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > Don't understand why you prefer an absolute path? I use relative path, > > In web.xml > > <taglib> > <taglib-uri>/tags/struts-tiles</taglib-uri> > <taglib-location>/WEB-INF/struts-tiles.tld</taglib-location> > </taglib> > In a JSP 1.2 (or later) container, you can now nest multiple TLDS in the "META-INF/tlds" subdirectory of a JAR file, and they will be automatically recognized by the container. That means you do not have to use any <taglib> directive at all in the web.xml file, if you don't want to, as long as you use the official URIs for these libraries (it's in the <uri> element of the TLD itself. The Struts documentation still describes the techniques using <taglib>, because the minimum platform is JSP 1.1 and automatic TLD recognition for multiple tag libraries does not work there. Craig -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>