Hi Martin,
You may try using the link source option, as suggested by the thread at
http://groups.google.com/group/google-appengine-java/browse_thread/thread/1908b3bedf954b75/ca0370ae3ae5a394?lnk=raot.
 If that doesn't work, you could set the output directory of your
dependencies to be the GWT output folder.

jason

On Mon, Jul 20, 2009 at 12:14 PM, martinhansen <
[email protected]> wrote:

>
> Hello Sean,
>
> thank you very much. I've thought of that solution too, but it is not
> appropriate for my GWT project. I have to add 4 external projects to
> my GWT project, and all of these 4 projects are subject to change
> every day. It would be too much work to export them to a jar file
> every day. Is there some way to automatically add the external project
> sources to the GWT output folder?
>
> On 20 Jul., 18:03, Sean <[email protected]> wrote:
> > You can export the non-GWT java files into a jar and drop those in the
> > WEB-INF/lib folder. That's what I do.
> >
> > On Jul 20, 11:44 am, martinhansen <[email protected]>
> > wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > > Hello,
> >
> > > my GWT server-side code needs an external java project. I have added
> > > the project under "Configure build path / Projects". It works fine in
> > > hosted mode. But when I deploy my application on a server, I get lots
> > > of ClassNotFoundExceptions. Obviously, GWT cannot find the external
> > > java code. When I look at the war\WEB-INF\classes folder, I see that
> > > the external java classes have not been included.
> >
> > > How can I get GWT to include the external classes?
> >
>

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