Hi Mark, I've been working on a longish example ("Chesstlet") that pulls
together a number of Restlet and GWT techniques, but this won't be ready
until November, due to some commitments I have in early October that
complicate my availability. In the meantime, maybe the best thing to do
would be to pull together a small illustration based on the test case
already in the Restlet source -- just beefing it up to do some useful things
beyond hello, world. I will try to get that together (or ask someone else
at the office to do so) in the next day or two.
The Restlet-GWT API is still largely unexercised (as opposed to the Restlet
GWT Extension, which is just the hosted mode wrapper for ServerServlet,
which is very heavily exercised) so we are discovering all sorts of new
issues as we try it out. So you should probably be working from a Restlet
snapshot to pick up all the latest commits. I think the latest important
thing was an infinite recursion that Thierry removed. Now that GWT 1.5 is
final and we don't have to chase a moving target any more, it will be easier
to stabilize this.
- Rob
On Sun, Sep 7, 2008 at 10:48 PM, Mark Petrovic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Good day. I'm new here, but not new to Java and its supporting
> technologies.
>
> I'm embarking on teaching myself GWT using Restlets, neither of which I
> have programmed before, although I have read the documentation for each. I
> know that at the time the Restlet-GWT code was released, a whopping 6 weeks
> ago :-), there were no examples illustrating its use. Perhaps there are
> snippets of examples the community can share now, some weeks after the
> release. If you have such examples, I would be quite grateful to study
> them, as would be, I'm sure, other newcomers to these subjects. I am
> particularly interested in running the server side using the Restlet NET
> connector.
>
> All the pieces are in front of me; at this point a few well placed examples
> would help bring it all together.
>
> Thank you.
>