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The "ComponentClassEnhacement" page has been changed by BobHarner.
The comment on this change is: outdated note.
http://wiki.apache.org/tapestry/ComponentClassEnhacement?action=diff&rev1=2&rev2=3

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+ || NOTE: This is outdated information that applies only to Tapestry 3 and 4.  
For current information see 
[[http://tapestry.apache.org/component-classes.html|Component Classes]]. ||
+ 
  Tapestry pages and components are often abstract.  At runtime, Tapestry uses 
information provided by the class and by the matching page or component 
specification, to enhance the class.
  
  Enhancement is the creation of a subclass with more methods and fields.
  
  Often the base class is abstract; the enhanced subclass is always concrete.
  
- Class enhnacement began in Tapestry 3.0; the motivation was the number of 
bugs caused (in 2.3 and earlier) by people not properly resetting instance 
variables of their pages/components
+ Class enhancement began in Tapestry 3.0; the motivation was the number of 
bugs caused (in 2.3 and earlier) by people not properly resetting instance 
variables of their pages/components
  back to default values when storing a page back into the page pool.
  
  Tapestry 3.0's <property-specification> element (renamed to <property> in 
3.1) directed Tapestry on how to create a new transient or persistent property, 
that would behave properly when the containing page was pooled; it works 
equally well for pages and components.
@@ -15, +17 @@

  
  It is still awkward that the classes you create are abstract.  Tapestry 3.1 
includes org.apache.tapestry.test.Creator, a utility class for instantiating 
abstract classes.  Creator does similar work to the enhancement subsystem; it 
finds all the properties of the class that are abstract and create simple 
read/write properties for each one. You can then test your classes.
  
- Tapestry 4.0 will no longer require that your page and component classes 
inherit from Tapestry base classes or implement Tapestry interfaces; it will be 
much more PlainOldJavaObjects.  However, it is still likely that the classes 
will be abstract.
+ Tapestry 4.0 will no longer require that your page and component classes 
inherit from Tapestry base classes or implement Tapestry interfaces; it will be 
much more Plain Old Java Objects.  However, it is still likely that the classes 
will be abstract.
  

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