Get/set and a null constructor, I thought. Anyhow.  Fact is, I can't seem to
directly reference my class from a jsp without getting that "response already
committed" error.  I even trimmed down the class to be trivial (does nothing) and
still get a error creating an instance of it or referring to its (only) static
variable.

Maybe it's some rule built into the JSP container (tomcat 3.1) that you can't
reference classes (except via usebean) in the user app area (WEB-INF/classes), or
maybe I am staring some obvious thing right in the face & not seeing it.

Martin

Brad Cox wrote:

> As far as I'm concerned, bean is just Sun's marketing name for objects. JSP'
> s usebean just requires the object to have get/set methods, which is
> another bad idea that JSP perpetrates with usebean.
>
> On Saturday, June 16, 2001, at 08:38 PM, Martin Smith wrote:
> > So I'm not doing usebean, for example
>
> ===========================================================================
> To unsubscribe: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "signoff JSP-INTEREST".
> For digest: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "set JSP-INTEREST DIGEST".
> Some relevant FAQs on JSP/Servlets can be found at:
>
>  http://java.sun.com/products/jsp/faq.html
>  http://www.esperanto.org.nz/jsp/jspfaq.html
>  http://www.jguru.com/jguru/faq/faqpage.jsp?name=JSP
>  http://www.jguru.com/jguru/faq/faqpage.jsp?name=Servlets

===========================================================================
To unsubscribe: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "signoff JSP-INTEREST".
For digest: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "set JSP-INTEREST DIGEST".
Some relevant FAQs on JSP/Servlets can be found at:

 http://java.sun.com/products/jsp/faq.html
 http://www.esperanto.org.nz/jsp/jspfaq.html
 http://www.jguru.com/jguru/faq/faqpage.jsp?name=JSP
 http://www.jguru.com/jguru/faq/faqpage.jsp?name=Servlets

Reply via email to