How do we get Confluence to *NOT* insert line breaks?  The only breaks
should be paragraph breaks caused by two blank lines. I've never seen a wiki
that does something this braindead.

On Thu, Oct 14, 2010 at 4:48 AM, <[email protected]> wrote:

>    Index <https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/TAPESTRY/Index> Page
> *edited* by Christophe 
> Cordenier<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/~ccordenier>
> Changes (12)
>  ...
> h3. Tapestry is ... a web framework for Java
>
> Tapestry applications are written in Java, the most popular enterprise
> applications development language. Tapestry combines simple Java classes
> with straight-forward templates to form components and pages. Tapestry takes
> care of all the "ugly plumbing" of a typical web application. Tapestry
> embraces convention over configuration. Say goodbye to endlessly editing
> simple Java classes with straight-forward templates to form components and
> pages. Tapestry takes care of all the "ugly plumbing" of a typical web
> application. Tapestry embraces convention over configuration. Say goodbye to
> endlessly editing
> XML configuration files!
>
> ...
> h3. Tapestry is ... productive
>
> Code and templates are lean and mean. Live class reloading means that the
> time between seeing an error and providing the fix is seconds, not
> minutes. Advanced exception reporting gives you all the tools you need to
> fix your problem: not just a stack trace, but every bit of information you
> need to know about what Tapestry was doing, why it was doing it, what went
> wrong, and how to fix it.
> is seconds, not minutes. Advanced exception reporting gives you all the
> tools you need to fix your problem: not just a stack trace, but every bit of
> information you need to know about what Tapestry was doing, why it was doing
> it, what went wrong, and how to fix it.
>
> h3. Tapestry is ... scalable
>
> Tapestry works well for everything from a lone developer working on an
> application with just a couple of pages, all the way up to large teams and
> applications with hundreds of pages and custom components. For big teams,
> Tapestry's pages and components design keeps the efforts of different
> developers automatically integrated.
> all the way up to large teams and applications with hundreds of pages and
> custom components. For big teams, Tapestry's pages and components design
> keeps the efforts of different developers automatically integrated.
>
> Tapestry scales up big on a single server, but also gives you great options
> for when you need to switch to a cluster. Tapestry makes it easy to store
> information on the client (as hidden fields or query parameters) or on the
> server (in the session).
> ...
> h3. Tapestry is ... adaptable
>
> Tapestry's architecture is open and extensible. Don't like how Tapestry
> operates? There's a clean way to add your own logic, or substitute some of
> Tapestry's logic with your own. Tapestry modules make it easy to create
> components and package them for reuse in your current application, or across
> many applications.
> logic, or substitute some of Tapestry's logic with your own. Tapestry
> modules make it easy to create components and package them for reuse in your
> current application, or across many applications.
>
> Tapestry has built-in modules for integrating Tapestry with the popular
> [Hibernate|http://hibernate.org] and [Spring|http://www.springsource.org/]
> projects, and third-party integrations with other
> ...
> h3. Tapestry is ... global
>
> Tapestry has built-in support for more than a dozen different languages,
> and makes it easy for your application to cleanly support multiple
> localizations. Tapestry automatically tracks the user's preferred locale and
> makes it easy to access user-localized messages across the entire
> application.
> support multiple localizations. Tapestry automatically tracks the user's
> preferred locale and makes it easy to access
> user-localized messages across the entire application.
>
> h3. Tapestry is ... dependable
>
> Tapestry's roots go back to 2003 as an Apache project, and even earlier as
> an open-source project. Thousands of applications run on Tapestry,
> including high-throughput sites such as SeeSaw.com. Tapestry applications
> have a history of running glitch-free.
> run on Tapestry, including high-throughput sites such as SeeSaw.com.
> Tapestry applications have a history of running glitch-free.
>
> h3. Tapestry is ... fun
> ...
>  Full Content
>  [image: Tapestry]
> Component oriented framework for creating dynamic, robust, highly scalable
> web applications in Java.
>
>    - Java power
>
>    Tapestry pages and components are simple Java POJOs, with easy access
>    to all Java language features and the vast Java ecosystem. Thanks to Java's
>    advanced concurrency API, Tapestry handles requests fast without 
> sacrificing
>    security or stability.
>     - Scripting ease
>
>    Tapestry features *live class reloading*: change your Java code,
>    refresh the browser and see the changes... instantly! Have your cake and 
> eat
>    it too: the speed and depth of Java, the agile development style of Ruby or
>    Python.
>     - Highly Productive
>
>    Simple POJO classes, streamlined templates, live class reloading,
>    state-of-the-art exception reporting, first-class Ajax support, and a big
>    library of built-in components: Tapestry is designed from the ground up to
>    give you great productivity.
>
>  *We think you will love Tapestry!* Give us 20 minutes and *follow our
> tutorial <https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/TAPESTRY/Tutorial>*.
>  News
> <https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/createrssfeed.action?types=blogpost&spaces=TAPESTRY&title=Apache+Tapestry+News+RSS+Feed&labelString%3D&sort=modified&maxResults=10&timeSpan=5&confirm=Create&showContent=false&showDiff=false>
>  Monday, 11 October 
> 2010<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/TAPESTRY/2010/10/11>
>  Tapestry version 5.2.1 
> (beta)<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/TAPESTRY/2010/10/11/Tapestry+version+5.2.1+%28beta%29>
>  Last changed Oct 12, 2010 18:59 by Howard M. Lewis 
> Ship<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/~hlship>
>
> Following a successful vote, the Tapestry team has released the first beta
> release of Tapestry 5.2, version 5.2.1.
>
> This release consists mostly of bug fixes on top of release 5.2.0. Full 
> release
> notes<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/TAPESTRY/Release+Notes+5.2.1>are
>  available. Mainly, this release improves live service reloading and a
> number of issues related to JavaScript and Ajax.
>
> Read 
> more…<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/TAPESTRY/2010/10/11/Tapestry+version+5.2.1+%28beta%29>
>  *Posted at Oct 11, 2010* by Howard M. Lewis 
> Ship<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/~hlship>| 0
> comments<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/TAPESTRY/2010/10/11/Tapestry+version+5.2.1+%28beta%29?showComments=true#comments>|
> Edit<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/pages/editblogpost.action?pageId=23340490>
>   Wednesday, 26 May 
> 2010<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/TAPESTRY/2010/05/26>
>  New 
> Website<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/TAPESTRY/2010/05/26/New+Website>
>  Last changed Jul 08, 2010 11:05 by Ulrich 
> Stärk<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/~uli>
>
> The Apache Tapestry project is pleased to announce the launch of its new
> website...
>
> Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Aliquam a felis
> diam, vel ultrices quam. Etiam ligula nisl, tristique id tincidunt ut,
> blandit non nisi. Nulla ultricies lacinia ipsum, sit amet pellentesque nibh
> rutrum in. Nulla facilisi. Vestibulum eget felis sed ipsum vestibulum
> laoreet. Morbi vitae odio erat. Vivamus eu mauris eu purus euismod auctor at
> at lectus. Quisque varius blandit nibh, …
>
> Read 
> more…<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/TAPESTRY/2010/05/26/New+Website>
>  *Posted at May 26, 2010* by Ulrich 
> Stärk<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/~uli>| 0
> comments<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/TAPESTRY/2010/05/26/New+Website?showComments=true#comments>|
> Edit<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/pages/editblogpost.action?pageId=21791140>
>   What is Tapestry? Tapestry is ... a web framework for Java
>
> Tapestry applications are written in Java, the most popular enterprise
> applications development language. Tapestry combines simple Java classes
> with straight-forward templates to form components and pages. Tapestry takes
> care of all the "ugly plumbing" of a typical web application. Tapestry
> embraces convention over configuration. Say goodbye to endlessly editing
> XML configuration files!
> Tapestry is ... component based
>
> Tapestry applications consist of pages and components. Components are easy
> to write, and easy to hook together. Tapestry always has an overall map of
> your application, because it knows all the pages and all the components
> within the pages ... this lets Tapestry do all the "dirty plumbing" of web
> application development.
> Tapestry is ... agile
>
> Easy to code, easy to test, easy to deploy. Tapestry encourages you to work
> in small increments with immediate feedback so you are always making fast,
> forward progress. Want to code in Groovy or Scala instead? No problem!
> Tapestry is ... fast
>
> Tapestry is pure Java. It doesn't use Java reflection, and is built to
> cleanly support large numbers of concurrent threads. Better yet, it
> automatically includes standard performance-enhancing strategies such as
> GZip content compression, JavaScript aggregation, and far future expires
> headers ... all of which cut down response size and the number of client
> requests.
> Tapestry is ... productive
>
> Code and templates are lean and mean. Live class reloading means that the
> time between seeing an error and providing the fix is seconds, not minutes.
> Advanced exception reporting gives you all the tools you need to fix your
> problem: not just a stack trace, but every bit of information you need to
> know about what Tapestry was doing, why it was doing it, what went wrong,
> and how to fix it.
> Tapestry is ... scalable
>
> Tapestry works well for everything from a lone developer working on an
> application with just a couple of pages, all the way up to large teams and
> applications with hundreds of pages and custom components. For big teams,
> Tapestry's pages and components design keeps the efforts of different
> developers automatically integrated.
>
> Tapestry scales up big on a single server, but also gives you great options
> for when you need to switch to a cluster. Tapestry makes it easy to store
> information on the client (as hidden fields or query parameters) or on the
> server (in the session).
> Tapestry is ... adaptable
>
> Tapestry's architecture is open and extensible. Don't like how Tapestry
> operates? There's a clean way to add your own logic, or substitute some of
> Tapestry's logic with your own. Tapestry modules make it easy to create
> components and package them for reuse in your current application, or across
> many applications.
>
> Tapestry has built-in modules for integrating Tapestry with the popular
> Hibernate <http://hibernate.org> and Spring 
> <http://www.springsource.org/>projects, and third-party integrations with 
> other
> tools, such as Quartz <http://www.quartz-scheduler.org/>.
> Tapestry is ... global
>
> Tapestry has built-in support for more than a dozen different languages,
> and makes it easy for your application to cleanly support multiple
> localizations. Tapestry automatically tracks the user's preferred locale and
> makes it easy to access user-localized messages across the entire
> application.
> Tapestry is ... dependable
>
> Tapestry's roots go back to 2003 as an Apache project, and even earlier as
> an open-source project. Thousands of applications run on Tapestry, including
> high-throughput sites such as SeeSaw.com. Tapestry applications have a
> history of running glitch-free.
> Tapestry is ... fun
>
> Tapestry removes the tedium of developing web applications, leaving just
> the fun parts. Tapestry keeps you "in the zone", having fun and coding up a
> storm! Tapestry: code less deliver more!
>
> More on Tapestry 
> philosophy<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/TAPESTRY/Principles>
> Who is using Tapestry?
>
>    -
>    Wooki <http://www.wooki.com> : Opensource collaboration app
>    -
>    Seesaw <http://www.seesaw.com> : Video streaming
>
>    Change Notification 
> Preferences<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/users/viewnotifications.action>
> View Online <https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/TAPESTRY/Index> |
> View 
> Changes<https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/pages/diffpagesbyversion.action?pageId=20645177&revisedVersion=33&originalVersion=32>
>



-- 
Howard M. Lewis Ship

Creator of Apache Tapestry

The source for Tapestry training, mentoring and support. Contact me to learn
how I can get you up and productive in Tapestry fast!

(971) 678-5210
http://howardlewisship.com

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