Thanks a lot Folke and Thomas.

Fred

On Fri, Sep 12, 2008 at 20:42, Thomas Broyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
>
>
> On 12 sep, 14:17, Folke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Yeah, the API doc is pretty thin and sometimes confusing.
> > Widget.onLoad() is called by Widget.onAttach().
> >
> > While Widget.onAttach() is mostly for Panel implementers,
> > Widget.onLoad() is for Widget implementers. Override onLoad() if you
> > like to be notified when your Widget is being attached.
>
> In brief:
>  - if you want your code called just before child widgets are being
> attached (and before the event listener is actually set), override
> onAttach and put your code before super.onAttach()
>  - if you want your code called after child widgets have been attached
> (and after the event listener has been set), override onLoad (which is
> equivalent to overriding onAttach and putting your code after
> super.onAttach())
>
> > Look at the source:
> http://code.google.com/p/google-web-toolkit/source/browse/releases/1....
>
> Yes, it's always the best solution when you wonder how things work.
> And given that the source is included within gwt-user.jar, hovering a
> method while maintain the shift key depressed shows you the method's
> code (in Eclipse), so it's really really easy.
>
> >
>

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