Hmm, my approach isn't ideal, but I check for the existence of
folders.

For example, on my server I know the path /home/user/myname/
public_html/moduleName is a folder that exists.  Likewise, on my
hosted setup, the path C:\Documents and Settings\myname\My Documents
\workspace\projectName exists.

I hardcode these two locations into my server code, and when it loads
I check for both. If one (and only one) exists, then I set my root
variable (a String) accordingly. You can definitely get the public
folder's location from this, but I don't have the code at hand.

On Sep 4, 11:39 pm, "alex.d" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >try
>
> >GWT.getModuleBaseURL()
>
> I'm of course speeking about server-side - on the client side, you
> can't really read files
>
> > Server-side? getResourceAsStream maybe?
>
> Still need the path, right?
>
> >(and include your ...public package in your JAR)
>
> That actually may help. But then i'll have it twice - once as a folder
> for html-pages and once as a part of a JAR. May actually work, but not
> an elegant solution ;-)
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