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 ------------------------------------------------------ http://restlet.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=4447&dsMessageId=2935421

