The doc shows a simple example, with the expectation that you can
expand on it for your own solution.  Create a serializable class that
you fill from all the GUI values and pass it.  Make the function with
many parameters.  Use one of the several infrastructures built on top
of GWT that associate data fields with your data store and do much of
the work for you.  There's any number of solutions that can work.

I hate to sound short, people on this forum are enthusiastic users and
supporters of GWT, would like to see the community growing, and try to
help those with trouble where we can.  And it looks like your site is
for a really great cause.  But after giving responses across many
posts with pointers to lots of information and examples, it'd be nice
to see effort reciprocated in response to read the docs, try the
examples, understand the concepts and reasoning behind the GWT
approach, and apply this towards your own app.  If you run into a
problem or don't understand something specific, great, post it up and
people will be more than happy to help you through it.  But we're not
here to walk you through learning GWT or to design your app for you!

jk

On Apr 7, 9:52 pm, Vik <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hie
>
> Well this doc suggests to pass all the data elements individually in the
> method call. My concern is it will be kind of painful to pass say 20 data
> values like this. I am looking if there is an easier way to do that?
>
> Thankx and Regards
>
> Vik
> Founderwww.sakshum.comwww.sakshum.blogspot.com
>

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