Hi Freddy,

Thanks for the help. Further comments inline.

On 30 November 2011 15:12, Freddy Daoud <xf2...@fastmail.fm> wrote:
[...]
> Not a big deal, but note that you can use just
> beanclass="${actionBean.class}" in <s:form>.

Noted. Thank you.

[...]
> I don't think this affects your code, but I would really
> advise against using an event handler method named "submit".
> I can't remember why exactly at the moment, but I remember that
> it's a Really Bad Idea to have an HTML submit button named
> submit.

Noted. Thank you. I've got a fair bit of code that uses "submit()", so
I'll be doing a fair bit of refactoring. :-)


>> My experience when dealing with one dimensional arrays (changing
>> answer[][] to answer1[], answer2[]) is that you get an array of
>> answers propagated for you. eg. If you speak both English and French,
>> you get answer2[] = {"1", "2"}; if you live in Australia you get
>> answer1[] = {"1"}
>>
>> So, I would have thought that with the example I list the code for, if
>> you live in Australia and speak English and French you should get
>> answer[][] = {{}, {"1"}, {"1", "2"}} (my arrays are one indexed, so
>> the zero index should be null or an empty array). Is this not the
>> case?
>
> I would have thought so too. I'll admit I am surprised. I'm not sure
> why it doesn't work, but I can tell you that if you change your
> property to
>
> public List<List<String>> answer;
>
> you will get what you expect, i.e.
>
> answer = [null, [1], [1, 2]]
>
> I'm hoping you don't mind working with List<List<String>> instead of
> String[][]..

Making that one change solved the problem. List<List<String>> works
perfectly, String[][] doesn't. So I'm guessing that's a bug? At least
there's a workaround, and it's not a bad one.

Thanks again for your help. Should I be opening a bug report for this one?

Regards,
Nathan.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure 
contains a definitive record of customers, application performance, 
security threats, fraudulent activity, and more. Splunk takes this 
data and makes sense of it. IT sense. And common sense.
http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-novd2d
_______________________________________________
Stripes-users mailing list
Stripes-users@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/stripes-users

Reply via email to