I have created a JIRA issue for this: http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MYFACES-104
I hope to add the feature shortly. sean On Mon, 7 Feb 2005 11:16:14 -0500, Sean Schofield <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > No it does not support forceId but I can add it for you shortly. That > would be nice to have. > > sean > > > On Mon, 07 Feb 2005 09:35:12 -0600, Norm Deane > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I took a look at the source and it looks like the style and styleClass > > attributes are now optional. From the DivRenderer... > > > > * Revision 1.3 2004/11/27 00:00:09 svieujot > > * Remove the limitation to have a style or a styleClass attribute > > because sometimes, just a plain <div> can be useful. > > > > So with this in mind I'm wondering if I could just use the forceId > > attribute to achieve a <div id="mydiv">. It looks like Jira issue > > MYFACES-70 (http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MYFACES-70) includes > > supprt for the forceId attribute on some of the input components. Has > > the forceId attribute been added to the Div component? If not, will it > > (or can it) be added? I wouldn't mind putting together a patch to add it > > with some guidance from Sean or others. > > > > Norm Deane > > http://jroller.com/page/deanen > > > > Sean Schofield wrote: > > > > >>You can do <x:div class=""/>. Yeah, I consider class/id requirement to > > >>be a bug in x:div implementation, but a minor inconvenience at most. > > >>It'd be very easy to patch in MyFaces... I guess who is the most > > >>bothered about it should should fix it. <x:div> approach is > > >>generalizable and already done for the most common html tags. > > >> > > >> > > > > > >I agree. Norm, maybe you could take a crack at fixing the bug > > >yourself? People will be happy to help you if you are not sure how to > > >build, submit a patch, etc. > > > > > >Start by searching JIRA and see if this bug has been reported already. > > > If it hasn't then go ahead and request the enhancement there. Once > > >people agree that this is a bug/problem (which we now have), this is > > >the next step. At a minimum someone else will fix it for you at some > > >point. > > > > > >I'd recommend trying to fix it yourself though. It is a great way to > > >learn something about JSF. I am just learning JSF myself and looking > > >at the MyFaces code and seeing what is going on in there helps quite a > > >bit. Pretty soon you will be a JSF master! > > > > > > > > > > > >>Kalle > > >> > > >> > > > > > >sean > > > > > > > > > > > > > >