>> Now, the problem is that the "commits" array is always empty in the 
>> response, even if I pass an array with two commits in them. I found out that 
>> the problem is because a commit have a "id" attribute, so ERRest try to find 
>> an object with this id. So I removed "id" from the request just to see how 
>> far it will go, and I'm getting those:
> you can set a new ERXRestFormatDelegate on the json format to redefine what 
> the "id" key is ... we should probably convert that over to be a property 
> lookup in the ERXRestFormatDelegate constructor.
> 
>> What do I need to do in my class so that the descriptor returns a 
>> IndexedPropertyDescriptor instead of PropertyDescriptor?  Both GHPayload and 
>> GHCommit have getters starting with "get" (I thought the problem was there, 
>> before I didn't have any "get" in from the getters name).
> indexed properties aren't supported in the public wonder version .... try on 
> my repo and see if it behaves differently?
actually, i think you only get indexed property descriptors if you explicitly 
declare your descriptors ... that said, i thought there was special cased code 
for dealing with Object.class, that it just ignores the fact that it doesn't 
know what keys are available ... i'll tinker with it.

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