Thanks Craig!! It worked !!

Alexis

"Craig R. McClanahan" wrote:

> On Mon, 30 Jul 2001, Alexis Alarcón Barra wrote:
>
> > ok ... i've done already that, but how can get the object from a jsp page to
> > manipulate it?
> >
>
> If you create a servlet context attribute, then it's just a <jsp:useBean>
> declaration with "application" scope.
>
> > Alexis
> >
>
> Craig McClanahan
>
> > "Craig R. McClanahan" wrote:
> >
> > > On Mon, 30 Jul 2001, Alexis Alarcón Barra wrote:
> > >
> > > > Hi,
> > > > anyone knows how to create an object from the startup of the server and
> > > > make it available for the application. I don't want to call a servlet to
> > > > get it from a JSP page. Is there another way?
> > > >
> > >
> > > In any servlet container that implements 2.2 or later, you can create a
> > > servlet that is marked <load-on-startup> in the web.xml file, and then
> > > create your objects in the init() method of that servlet.  For more info
> > > about web.xml, see the Servlet Specification at
> > >
> > >   http://java.sun.com/products/servlet/download.html
> > >
> > > For servlet 2.3 containers (i.e. Tomcat 4.0 for now, others soon), you can
> > > also use the new "Application Event Listener" mechanism to register a
> > > class that is told about the context startup and context shutdown
> > > events.  This is a perfect place to initialize things at startup time.
> > >
> > > > Alexis
> > > >
> > >
> > > Craig McClanahan
> >
> >
> > _________________________________________________________
> > Do You Yahoo!?
> > Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com
> >
> >


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