This is actually the moment i expect Jack Dakota to jump out of the bushes :-)
What do you do, if you habe more than one build target? How you separate the libs for the stand-alone application or scriplet from those you need only for taglibs? Tell me your jsps aren't packaged as the rest of the code... You are probably 'implementing' constant interfaces? Forgive me, it's Friday... But to be serious again: <snip> I like the idea of having all the files related to a project in the same parent folder. </snip> I think WEB-INF doesn't belong to the project, since it's neither a source nor a configuration file/requirement. It's just part of specification of one of possible environments. And by the way, hitting ant button in eclipse or a key-shortcut is as fast as hitting ctrl-s :-) Regards Leon TGIF! > -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- > Von: Bryce Fischer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Gesendet: Freitag, 4. Februar 2005 21:28 > An: Struts Users Mailing List > Betreff: Re: [ANN] Free JSP Editor for Eclipse > > Leon Rosenberg wrote: > > Why would anyone have WEB-INF folder in his/her project ? > > Never heard about ant? > > I do. It makes at least one less test/deployment step and is > actually very easy to setup (in Eclipse at least). Plus, I > like the idea of having all the files related to a project in > the same parent folder. > > My typical web project looks like this: > root > -src > -test > -webroot > ---WEB-INF > -----classes > -----lib > > source is compiled into webroot\WEB-INF\classes. Set my > Tomcat context docBase to point to the project's webroot folder. > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]