Hello Chris, 

I can answer yes! But it's not working well for IE<9. It gave me big
headaches. For the rest of the navigators it ran well...

Here is a demo. You cannot login, sorry.

http://www1.seglan.com/remesas-movistar/remesas/login?0

I used several projects:


        Bootstrap:
        http://twitter.github.com/bootstrap/

        For the bar at the top:
http://tomaszdziurko.pl/2012/03/wicket-and-twitter-bootstrap-navbar/


        Not really related but usefull:

        I use dojo for the controls, not al but some:
http://dojotoolkit.org/
        And the links to wicket done by me: 
                Examples:
http://wicket-dojo.level2crm.com/wicket-dojo-examples-1.6.0/
                Code: https://gitorious.org/wicket-dojo

        But you need controls integrate with bootstrap theme, so I used
also:
        
        For the themes: http://bootswatch.com/
        swatchmaker: for creation of new themes
        dbootstrap: for dojo integration of css
                

With everything it really works.

Want to take a look to:  https://github.com/decebals/wicket-bootstrap

Best regards,


El vie, 12-10-2012 a las 09:11 +1000, Chris Colman escribió:

> Is it possible/feasible to 'selectively' use the Twitter bootstrap in a
> wicket app?
>  
> Scenario: our app serves many different clients. Some will want the
> Twitter Bootstrap look and feel but others will be happy to use any
> number of existing CSS/JS templates that we have created for them over
> the years.
>  
> Currently we use a combination of Wicket variations and conditional
> header injection to provide different look and feel for customers even
> though they all use the same Wicket page classes.
>  
> Is it possible to use Twitter Bootstrap in the same way? i.e.
> conditionally use it when rendering a page for one customer but not
> using it when rendering that same page class for another customer?
>  
> 
> Yours sincerely,
>  
> Chris Colman
>  
> Pagebloom Team Leader,
> Step Ahead Software
> 
> 
>  

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