Ahh, I didn't know that, that's very useful.. Thanks! :)

Eric Norman wrote:
Well the way I've been doing that is to add a hidden input field to the html
form that sets the jcr:primaryType property of the child node.  If the child
node doesn't exist it gets created automatically.

For example:
      <!-- also create child node for extra stuff -->
      <input type="hidden" name="widgets/jcr:primaryType"
value="nt:unstructured" />


On Tue, Aug 25, 2009 at 12:54 PM, Branden Visser <[email protected]>wrote:

Eric Norman wrote:

Can you just create the widgets node at the same time you create the page
node?  You can do that in the POST that creates the page or use a JCR
event
listener to listen for page creation events.


How do I do that in the POST that creates the page?

Thanks,

Branden


 On Aug 25, 2009 12:26 PM, "Branden Visser" <[email protected]> wrote:
Alexander Klimetschek wrote: > > On Tue, Aug 25, 2009 at 7:19 PM, Branden
Visser<[email protected]...
Maybe this is would be bad design, but to me it makes sense to first and
foremost find the deepest resolvable resource before the first '.', rather
than rely on a dot or the full URL to tell it where the resource should
be.

One use case I have (which is why I've been trying to extract a suffix
from
this) is that I have a content structure like so:

.../pages/home/widgets/hello_world

Where 'home' is of type 'portal/page', and was created by a user.

When the 'home' page is created, somehow that 'widgets' directory needs to
be created. So, if I try and access the list of widgets that belong to the
'home' page, I can do:

.../pages/home/widgets.html

If the /widgets folder doesn't exist yet, I have a GET.esp file that maps
to
'portal/page' type that can create the subdirectory for me (verifying that
this is what the request is looking for, of course), then do a
sling.include(.../pages/home/widgets.html) to transparently fill in the
structure.

If anyone has a better way to accomplish this without using suffix, I am
all
ears (eyes?) :-)

Thanks,
Branden

 c) the second part is separated into selectors (in between dots) > d)
last

dot-separated part is...



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