tbt wrote:
Hi
I tried to add a attribute to a html tag using the wicket:message tag. The
code is as follows
HomePage.html
<input type="button" class="button" wicket:message="value:button.label" />
HomePage.properties
button.label=save
This method didnt display the label in the html page. Then in the
applications init() method I added
WicketMessageTagHandler.enable = true; and modified the tag as
<input type="button" class="button" wicket:message key="value:button.label"
/>
but still it is not working. Can someone tell me how to add an attribute to
a tag using wicket:message
Thanks
Nadeeshan
Erik van Oosten-3 wrote:
Yes, this is possible.
But actually the previous solution is usally sufficient. You can easily
define a page that is extended by all other pages. In the base page you
can include the stylesheet as before and all other pages will get it
too. (See the wiki for component inheritance.)
But anyway, here is a non tested approach:
- move the style.css (and variations) somewhere on your classpath. For
example in the package that contains the java file JustSomeClass.java.
- remove the <wicket:link> from the markup file
- give the stylesheet link a wicket:id, eg.:
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="style.css"
wicket:id="abc"></link>
- in the code do something like:
add(new StyleSheetReference("abc", JustSomeClass.class, "style.css"))
Regards,
Erik.
tbt wrote:
Hi,
I like to have my css file('style.css') in a seperate folder instead of
having it in the same folder as HomePage.java because multiple web pages
are
using the same classes in the css file. Is it possible to have both css
files(style.css and style_tw.css) in a seperate folder. This applies for
only css files and not property files which I would be happy to keep in
the
same folder as the html and java files.
Thanks
Erik van Oosten-3 wrote:
You can call:
getSession().setLocale(new Locale("en", "US"))
In the Java javadocs
(http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/docs/api/java/util/Locale.html) you find
references to language and country codes. Language code "ta" means Tamil
so that is probably not what you want. Country Taiwan is represented by
county code "TW".
Switching css is fairly easy. Put this in the header:
<wicket:link><link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"
href="style.css"></link></wicket:link>
and move style.css to the same folder as HomePage.html.
Now if you want to add another locale for the stylesheet, you just add a
file called style_[language code].css. No other changes needed.
Regards,
Erik.
tbt wrote:
Hi
I have a html page called HomePage.html
<html>
<head>
<link href="Resources/css/style.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"
/>
</head>
<body>
English
Taiwanese
<wicket:message key="option_id" />
</body>
</html>
and two property files called HomePage.properties and
HomePage_ta.properties.
These files hold the values which should be replaced inside the
<wicket:message> tag.
How can I switch between these property files once the user selects a
particular language inside my HomePage .java class. I also need to
change
the css file according to each language.
eg:- If Taiwanese is selected it should look like <link
href="Resources/css/style_ta.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />
Thanks
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Hi,
I use AttributeModifier / AttributeAppender to add attributes to HTML
elements. Something like
yourComponent.add(new AttributeModifier("value", true, new
ResourceModel("button.label")));
should do the trick. The boolean value makes sure that the attribute is
added even if it is not present in the HTML.
HTH
Tom
P.S this is my first post to the list so "hello" to everybody :) ...
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