Hello Richard,

Can you make a test with the latest snapshot? I think that the problem 
is fixed now...
Tell me if it's the case. Thanks.

Thierry
> First, the good news.  My code is working.  But I don't understand WHY it
> works.
>
> Using Restlet and the "Annotated Interface" approach, described at
> http://wiki.restlet.org/docs_2.0/13-restlet/27-restlet/328-restlet/285-restlet.html.
> I am also running Restlet GAE (if that matters).
>
> I am using Post to add a new Comment to a collection of Comments, so my
> CommentsResource interface has the following:
>    @Post("json")
>    public Representation postJson(String value);
>
>    @Post("java")
>    public Representation postJava(Comment comment);
>
>    @Post("form")
>    public Representation postForm(Form form);
>
> And my CommentsServerResource class that implements this interface has three
> corresponding implementations, each of which is annotated to match the
> methods in the interface.
>
> Now I write a test case in Java.  The essence is:
>      ClientResource client4 = new ClientResource("xxx/comments/");
>      CommentsResource commentsResource =
> client4.wrap(CommentsResource.class);
>      client4.setRequestEntityBuffering(true);  //
> stackoverflow.com/questions/6462142
>      Comment comment = new Comment("Hi there from Java", new Date());
>      Representation representation4 = commentsResource.postJava(comment);
>
> And the big mystery is that the postJava() method is NOT called, but rather
> the postJson() method IS called.  And somehow my Comment object was
> magically converted to a Json string.  It's kinda cool that it works this
> way, but I am sure I am missing something (in addition to my lack of IQ
> points, which must be obvious by now :) :) ).
>
> RB

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