Thanks to Merrill for pointing out that the problem was probably in the javascript. By includining actual file, section by section, in jsp page I was able to isolate some javascript errors that triggered the requestDispatcher. I haven't figured out exactly why yet but at least I now know where the problem is coming from.
Thanks to everyone for their suggestions, Ken -----Original Message----- From: Merrill Cornish [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, January 12, 2004 12:43 PM To: Januski,Ken Subject: RE: OT?:Can't include .js file on jsp page controlled by front co ntro ller servlet Ken, One interesting "characteristic" of JavaScript is that if there is any error, it quietly does nothing. So, you may be correctly downloading it, but it finds something wrong and does nothing. One way to attack the problem is to get a copy of the JavaScript file and include it directly in your JSP page between <script> ... </script> tags rather than downloading the .js file with <script src=...>. Once you have it in your JSP page, edit the JavaScript so that each JavaScript function is individually enclosed in a <script> ... </script> pair rather than having the whole thing in a single <script> ... </script> tag pair. JavaScript merges all of the individual tag pair together as if it were one big declaration EXCEPT an error in one function now does not stop other functions from executing. Finally, use alert(...); statements at the top fo the various JavaScript functions to see which one is refusing to execute. That will tell you which function(s) have the error. You can then start commenting out blocks of code until you isolate the failing statement. Of course, it would be easier to use a JavaScript debugger, but I'm not familiar with them. Merrill