Hey Dan, that looks very nice! Thanks for sharing. Eelco
On 9/12/07, Dan Syrstad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > In response to Jonathan Locke's blog entry entitled "Wicket on Wheels" ( > http://web.mac.com/jonathan.locke/iWeb/JonathanLocke/Blog/6B9496DF-4AF1-455E-B94C-652709275041.html), > I have released Wicket Web Beans 1.0-rc1. Although this project does not > cover all of the functionality Jonathan spoke of, I believe it covers a good > chunk of it. The project is hosted on Sourceforge at: > http://wicketwebbeans.sourceforge.net . > > Summary: > Wicket Web Beans (WWB) is a Wicket component toolkit for displaying and > editing POJOs that conform to the JavaBeans specification. Web pages are > automatically generated based on bean properties and certain conventions. If > necessary, the layout, editability, and actions of these pages can be > customized on an exception basis. In other words, the toolkit normally does > what you'd expect, but when it doesn't, you can override its behavior. > > At the highest-level, WWB's BeanForm component provides rich AJAX form > functionality. The Page design that the form is embedded on is left to you, > this allows for customized page designs. Also, this allows multiple > BeanForms may be incorporated on a single page. At your choosing, other > lower-level components may be used independently of BeanForm (e.g., > BeanGridPanel). WWB does not try to force you into a certain way of doing > things, but BeanForm makes it very convenient to implement a bean-based form > if you don't want to go to a lot of extra work. You focus on the model > (beans), WWB handles the user interface. > I welcome any feedback you may have. Please post feedback to the project > forums at Sourceforge. > > -Dan > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]