You could also bind the JS to an applet which just pushes the updates back
to the server, the applet is not visible on the page.

-----Original Message-----
From: Yansheng Lin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, July 18, 2003 2:15 PM
To: 'Struts Users Mailing List'
Subject: RE: [Friday] How far can we let the clients push us?



Haha, that's what I did with my table when I have to submit the whole table
at
one.  Old string + new string.

-
 Javascript: sorry, I don't know you. what's your name again?
 JSP: jsp, stands for javaserver page.
 Javascript: nope, sorry buddy.  "Object not found"
-



-----Original Message-----
From: Erik Price [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: July 18, 2003 11:29 AM
To: Struts Users Mailing List
Subject: Re: [Friday] How far can we let the clients push us?


Raible, Matt wrote:
> We had the same requirement from our client - and we actually implemented
> it!  Using JavaScript and the DOM, we're able to add/delete rows, sort by
> columns, have tabs for different sheets - pretty slick IMO.

That is cool.  DOM is unwieldy, but it's an incredibly powerful
mechanism in web pages -- it really does add a ton of control.  What I'm
curious, though, is what was done with this data after the users had
entered it into the spreadsheet -- was every single cell a form field,
or did you implode the cells into a big string and ship that to the server?



Erik


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