It's not a catch-all, of course. If you make errors like using 'float'
instead of 'cssFloat', it will still let it through silently.

Ian

http://examples.roughian.com


2009/10/6 ThomasWrobel <[email protected]>

>
> This used to confuse me greatly, so I'm very glade theres a specific
> error message now.
>
> On Oct 6, 8:00 am, Ian Bambury <[email protected]> wrote:
> > It's always been the case that you needed to use camelCase, it hasn't
> always
> > been the case that GWT would report the use of hyphens as an error.
> > Ian
> >
> > http://examples.roughian.com
> >
> > 2009/10/5 Joe Cole <[email protected]>
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > > Has this always been the case? I've just started encountering these
> > > errors after upgrading to 1.7.
> >
> > > On Oct 6, 4:43 am, Paul Robinson <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > > It's a javascript thing. All CSS names in javascript have to be
> > > > camelcase. So it's "border-left" in html, but "borderLeft" in any
> > > > javascript DOM code.
> >
> > > > Joe Cole wrote:
> > > > > Can someone explain why this code from
> com.google.gwt.dom.client.Style
> > > > > is enforcing camelcase:
> >
> > > > >   private void assertCamelCase(String name) {
> > > > >     assert !name.contains("-") : "The style name '" + name
> > > > >         + "' should be in camelCase format";
> > > > >   }
> >
>

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