Thanks Gal, it really helped!
I'm not quite sure I know how to "include a folder in my lookup
entries". Is this something I can do in Eclipse debugger?
The idea of using the injector directly didn't quite work, because I
need my generated class to be instanciated .asEagerSingleton(). If I
try calling GWT.create( MyGingector ) within the generated class I get
infinite recursion. If I instead try to assign the MyGingector
instance to some static variable, it doesn't work either because the
variable isn't initialized yet.
However, I've decided to rework my generated class to use method
injection instead of constructor injection and it seems to work very
well!
Cheers,
Philippe
On Mar 20, 7:31 pm, Gal Dolber <[email protected]> wrote:
> Ok,
>
> To view the generated class compile with "-gen /somepathonyourdisk", another
> tip to debug a generated class: include in your lookup entries the folder
> where the generated classes are and you will be able to step through the
> generated code.
>
> And to use gin into your generated class I didn't found a great solution,
> because you can inject an interface that is generated but gin just make a
> GWT.create(theinterface.class); and it wont inject into the generated class.
>
> This is what I did:
> Add an set-configuration-property into your module (define it first) and
> specify on it the location of your injector, then use directly the injector
> into your generated code. Like this:
>
> <add-configuration-property name="gin.injector"
> value="com.some.gin.MyGinInjector" />
>
> Regards
>
> 2010/3/20 PhilBeaudoin <[email protected]>
>
>
>
> > I'm trying to write my first GWT generator... I've gotten pretty far,
> > but I have the following questions:
> > 1) Is there any way to see the generated class for debugging purposes?
> > For example, can I force GWT to produce the .java file for my
> > generated class (it did it once when I had an error, but I can't force
> > it to produce it every time.) Any other hints as to how to debug a
> > generated class?
> > 2) I'd like to use GIN to inject objects in the constructor of the
> > generated class. I'm not quite sure if this works or how to make it
> > work. Any hints would be great!
>
> > Thanks!
>
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