Hi Bela
I too tried your portlet example as you said and it does work except I
adulterated with some
dynamic chemical significant.. i mean what you read as text may not be
visible as text
but as picture.... So there is really no problem as long as you are
careful to be case-sensitive
while referring to the portlet.
I just used your mailed code.. under "jportal" instead of "default
jetspeed" environment.
1) placed the file "MSMOD.xreg" in :
c:\tomcat\webapps\jportal\WEB-INF\conf\
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<registry>
<portlet-entry name="MSMOD" hidden="false" type="ref" parent="JSP"
application="false">
<meta-info>
<title>MSMOD</title>
<description>Mol Soc Mol of Day</description>
</meta-info>
<classname>org.apache.jetspeed.portal.portlets.JspPortlet</classname>
<parameter name="template" value="MSMOD.jsp" hidden="true"
cachedOnName="true" cachedOnValue="true"/>
<media-type ref="html"/>
<url cachedOnURL="true"/>
<category group="Jetspeed">demo</category>
<category group="Jetspeed">jsp.demo</category>
</portlet-entry>
</registry>
2) other file: MSMOD.jsp in :
c:\tomcat\webapps\jportal\WEB-INF\templates\jsp\portals\html
<%@ page language="java"
session="false"
%>
<%@ taglib uri='/WEB-INF/templates/jsp/tld/template.tld'
prefix='jetspeed' %>
<p>
<td ALIGN=CENTER VALIGN=CENTER WIDTH="569" BGCOLOR="#ffffff"><img
border="0" src="logoMS01web.JPG">
<table border="2" WIDTH="832">
<TR>
<TD width="30" align="center">1</TD><TD width="422" align="center">
<a href="http://www.scripps.edu/news/press/122203.html">MOLECULE OF THE
DAY</a>
<p>11 Jan 2004</p>
<p>
<IMG
SRC="http://www.daylight.com/daycgi/smi2gif?4e31285b485d2943285b485d293d4e43343d43314e3d43284e285b485d2943333d43285b485d2943285b485d293d43284e3243285b485d29285b485d2943285b485d29285b485d294f43285b485d29285b485d294332285b485d295b485d2943285b485d293d43335b485d294e3d43344e285b485d294335285b485d2943285b485d29285b485d2943285b485d29285b485d2943285b485d29285b485d2943285b485d29285b485d294335285b485d295b485d">
<p><b>CHEMICAL NAME: <a
href="http://www.scripps.edu/news/press/122203.html"> REVERSINE</a>
<br>
</b></td><td width="356"><font size="4">
This compound, named reversine, causes cells which are normally
programmed to form muscles to undergo reverse differentiation
retreat along their differentiation pathway and turn into precursor
cells. These precursor cells are
multipotent; that is, they have the potential to become different cell
types. Thus, reversine represents a potentially useful tool for
generating unlimited supply of such precursors, which subsequently can
be converted to other cell types, such as bone or cartilage.</a></font>
</td></tr>
</table>
</p>
--
M. Karthikeyan, Ph.D., Scientist
_| _| _|_|_| _|
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_| _| _| _| _|
_| _|_| _| _|
_| _| o _|_|_|o _|_|_|_|
National Chemical Laboratory
Pune - 411 008, INDIA
Ph: +91-(0)20-5893 457 FAX: 5893 973
http://www.ncl-india.org/
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