If you're looking for an argument, try somewhere else :-)  If you want
help accomplishing something specific, ask.

I think there are 24 standard tags defined.   That means there's
somewhere around (infinity-24) tags that are not defined.    That's
why JSF supports creating your own components.

If you want to use JSF, it's easy to create your own anchor tag and
define separate renderers for Html, OpenDoc, Microsoft Word Documents,
and PDF Documents.


On 9/10/07, Chris Pratt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Chris Pratt a écrit :
> > > I'm trying to use Standard JSF (without using <f:verbatim>) to
> > > generate our web pages, but I can't figure out how to generate an
> > > anchor point (<a name="anchor">Top</a>).  Is there a standard tag that
> > > can do this?
> > >   (*Chris*)
> > >
> On 9/10/07, David Delbecq <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I don't see the need for a JSF tag for this. if you really don't want to
> > go f:verbatim, either choose tht tomahawk htmlTag tag, use facelets or
> > create your own "ancho" component.
> >
>
> I was told that the power of the flexible rendering model of JSF was
> that, by simply changing the RenderKit, you could re-target the output
> to different devices, that didn't necessarily understand HTML.  I'm
> wondering how that can be possible if you can't even specify the
> target of a link using a standard syntax?
>   (*Chris*)
>

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