Hi David,

would you be willing - if time permits - to post a short outline of your
solution on our Wiki?

Thanks very much in advance!

regards,

Martin

On Jan 12, 2008 2:33 PM, David Delbecq <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Did here, nothing difficult or fancy about it. Just use the
> addResourcesFactory.getInstance(...) to get an instance of AddResource.
> Then use on it, methods with signature addXXX(...., ResourceHandler
> resourceHandler);
> You just have to code your own resourceHandler class. Main job of this
> class is to split and check the ressources requested. It then returns a
> class of type org.apache.myfaces.renderkit.html.util.ResourceLoader
> which serve the requested content. Overall here, we had just a few lines
> of code.
>
> Another more stupid solution is to indeed put your resources in a
> subpackage of org.apache.myfaces.custom :)
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
> >
> > Hi,
> >
> >
> >
> > I've written a custom component that requires some Javascript. I have
> > the js in an external file but I was hoping to have it included in the
> > tag, kind of like the myfaces tags do. I tried using the AddResource
> > class, basically looked at the myfaces source and tried to do the same
> > thing, but it fails on the component validation. It checks if the
> > package starts with org.apache.myfaces.custom… or something like that.
> > I can't really get past that unless if I want to rebuild myfaces. Is
> > there a way to get this to work externally? Or is there a way to do
> > this I don't know about. For now I have to just manually include the
> > script in the JSP pages. This will work, but it can lead to
> > complication if someone else is using the tag and neglects to add the
> > javascript.
> >
> >
> >
> > Thanks
> >
> > Matt
> >
>
>


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