Author: buildbot
Date: Tue Feb 13 02:20:37 2018
New Revision: 1025319

Log:
Production update by buildbot for tapestry

Modified:
    websites/production/tapestry/content/cache/main.pageCache
    websites/production/tapestry/content/component-parameters.html
    websites/production/tapestry/content/overriding-exception-reporting.html
    websites/production/tapestry/content/switching-cases.html

Modified: websites/production/tapestry/content/cache/main.pageCache
==============================================================================
Binary files - no diff available.

Modified: websites/production/tapestry/content/component-parameters.html
==============================================================================
--- websites/production/tapestry/content/component-parameters.html (original)
+++ websites/production/tapestry/content/component-parameters.html Tue Feb 13 
02:20:37 2018
@@ -180,11 +180,11 @@
 </div></div><p>A component may have any number of parameters. Each parameter 
has a specific name, a specific Java type (which may be a primitive value), and 
may be <em>optional</em> or <em>required</em>.</p><p>Within a component class, 
parameters are declared by using the @<a  class="external-link" 
href="http://tapestry.apache.org/current/apidocs/org/apache/tapestry5/annotations/Parameter.html";>Parameter</a>
 annotation on a private field, as we'll see below.</p><p><span 
class="confluence-anchor-link" 
id="ComponentParameters-bindingparameters"></span></p><h1 
id="ComponentParameters-ParameterBindings">Parameter Bindings</h1><p>In 
Tapestry, a parameter is not a slot into which data is pushed: it is a 
<em>connection</em> between a field of the component (marked with the 
@Parameter annotation) and a property or resource of the component's container. 
(Components can be nested, so the container can be either the page or another 
component.)</p><div class="navmenu" style="float:right; backgr
 ound:white; margin:3px; padding:3px">
 <div class="panel" style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="panelHeader" 
style="border-bottom-width: 1px;"><b>Contents</b></div><div 
class="panelContent">
 <style type="text/css">/*<![CDATA[*/
-div.rbtoc1518405704819 {padding: 0px;}
-div.rbtoc1518405704819 ul {list-style: disc;margin-left: 0px;}
-div.rbtoc1518405704819 li {margin-left: 0px;padding-left: 0px;}
+div.rbtoc1518488413323 {padding: 0px;}
+div.rbtoc1518488413323 ul {list-style: disc;margin-left: 0px;}
+div.rbtoc1518488413323 li {margin-left: 0px;padding-left: 0px;}
 
-/*]]>*/</style><div class="toc-macro rbtoc1518405704819">
+/*]]>*/</style><div class="toc-macro rbtoc1518488413323">
 <ul class="toc-indentation"><li><a  
href="#ComponentParameters-ParameterBindings">Parameter Bindings</a></li><li><a 
 href="#ComponentParameters-BindingExpressions">Binding 
Expressions</a></li><li><a  
href="#ComponentParameters-@Parameterannotation">@Parameter 
annotation</a></li><li><a  
href="#ComponentParameters-Don'tusethe${...}syntax!">Don't use the ${...} 
syntax!</a></li><li><a  href="#ComponentParameters-InformalParameters">Informal 
Parameters</a></li><li><a  
href="#ComponentParameters-ParametersAreBi-Directional">Parameters Are 
Bi-Directional</a></li><li><a  
href="#ComponentParameters-InheritedParameterBindings">Inherited Parameter 
Bindings</a></li><li><a  
href="#ComponentParameters-ComputedParameterBindingDefaults">Computed Parameter 
Binding Defaults</a></li><li><a  
href="#ComponentParameters-UnboundParameters">Unbound Parameters</a></li><li><a 
 href="#ComponentParameters-ParameterTypeCoercion">Parameter Type 
Coercion</a></li><li><a  href="#ComponentParameters-ParameterNames">
 Parameter Names</a></li><li><a  
href="#ComponentParameters-DeterminingifBound">Determining if 
Bound</a></li><li><a  
href="#ComponentParameters-PublishingParameters">Publishing 
Parameters</a></li></ul>
 </div>
 </div></div></div>&#160;<p>The connection between a component and a property 
(or resource) of its container is called a <em>binding</em>. The binding is 
two-way: the component can read the bound property by reading its parameter 
field. Likewise, a component that updates its parameter field will update the 
bound property.</p><p>This is important in a lot of cases; for example a 
TextField component can read <em>and update</em> the property bound to its 
value parameter. It reads the value when rendering, but updates the value when 
the form is submitted.</p><p>The component listed below is a looping component; 
it renders its body a number of times, defined by its <code>start</code> and 
<code>end</code> parameters (which set the boundaries of the loop). The 
component can update a <code>result</code> parameter bound to a property of its 
container; it will automatically count up or down depending on whether 
<code>start</code> or <code>end</code> is larger.</p><div class="code panel 
pdl" st
 yle="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
@@ -261,7 +261,7 @@ private int index;
 &lt;/ul&gt;
 
 </pre>
-</div></div><p>In other words, you don't have to define a property in the Java 
code. The disadvantage is that render variables don't work with the property 
expression syntax, so you can pass around a render variable's <em>value</em> 
but you can't reference any of the value's properties.</p><p>Render variables 
are automatically cleared when a component finishes rendering.</p><p>Render 
variable names are case insensitive.</p><h3 
id="ComponentParameters-Property:Bindings">Property: Bindings</h3><p>The 
"prop:" binding prefix indicates a property expression binding.</p><p>Property 
expressions are used to link a parameter of a component to a property of its 
container. Property expressions can navigate a series of properties and/or 
invoke methods, as well as several other useful patterns. See <a  
href="component-parameters.html">Component Parameters</a>.</p><p>The default 
binding prefix in most cases is "prop:", which is why it is usually 
omitted.</p><h3 id="ComponentParameters-Validate:Bi
 ndings">Validate: Bindings</h3><p>Main Article: <a  
href="component-parameters.html">Component Parameters</a></p><p>The "validate:" 
binding prefix is highly specialized. It allows a short string to be used to 
create and configure the objects that perform input validation for form control 
components, such as TextField and Checkbox.</p><p>The string is a 
comma-separated list of <em>validator types</em>. These are short aliases for 
objects that perform the validation. In many cases, the validation is 
configurable in some way: for example, a validator that enforces a minimum 
string length needs to know what that minimum string length is. Such values are 
specified after an equals sign.</p><p>For example: 
<code>validate:required,minLength=5</code> would presumably enforce that a 
field requires a value, and with at least five characters.</p><h3 
id="ComponentParameters-Translate:Bindings">Translate: Bindings</h3><p>The 
"translate:" binding prefix is also related to input validation. It is t
 he name of a configured <a  class="external-link" 
href="http://tapestry.apache.org/current/apidocs/org/apache/tapestry5/Translator.html";>Translator</a>,
 responsible for converting between server-side and client-side representations 
of data (for instance, between client-side strings and server-side numeric 
values).</p><p>The list of available translators is configured by the <a  
class="external-link" 
href="http://tapestry.apache.org/current/apidocs/org/apache/tapestry5/services/TranslatorSource.html";>TranslatorSource</a>
 service.</p><h3 id="ComponentParameters-Asset:Bindings">Asset: 
Bindings</h3><p>Assets bindings are used to specify <a  
href="component-parameters.html">Component Parameters</a>, static content 
served by Tapestry. By default, assets are located relative to the component 
class in your packaged application or module. This can be overridden by 
prefixing the path with "context:", in which case, the path is a context path 
from the root of the web application context. Becau
 se accessing context assets is relatively common, a separate "context:" 
binding prefix for that purpose exists (described below).</p><h3 
id="ComponentParameters-Context:Bindings">Context: Bindings</h3><p>Context 
bindings are like asset bindings, but the path is <em>always</em> relative to 
the root of the web application context. This is intended for use inside 
templates, i.e.:</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div 
class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
+</div></div><p>In other words, you don't have to define a property in the Java 
code. The disadvantage is that render variables don't work with the property 
expression syntax, so you can pass around a render variable's <em>value</em> 
but you can't reference any of the value's properties.</p><p>Render variables 
are automatically cleared when a component finishes rendering.</p><p>Render 
variable names are case insensitive.</p><h3 
id="ComponentParameters-Property:Bindings">Property: Bindings</h3><p>Main 
Article: <a  href="property-expressions.html">Property 
Expressions</a></p><p>The "prop:" binding prefix indicates a property 
expression binding.</p><p>Property expressions are used to link a parameter of 
a component to a property of its container. Property expressions can navigate a 
series of properties and/or invoke methods, as well as several other useful 
patterns.</p><p>The default binding prefix in most cases is "prop:", which is 
why it is usually omitted.</p><h3 id="ComponentParamet
 ers-Validate:Bindings">Validate: Bindings</h3><p>Main Article: <a  
href="forms-and-validation.html">Forms and Validation</a></p><p>The "validate:" 
binding prefix is highly specialized. It allows a short string to be used to 
create and configure the objects that perform input validation for form control 
components, such as TextField and Checkbox.</p><p>The string is a 
comma-separated list of <em>validator types</em>. These are short aliases for 
objects that perform the validation. In many cases, the validation is 
configurable in some way: for example, a validator that enforces a minimum 
string length needs to know what that minimum string length is. Such values are 
specified after an equals sign.</p><p>For example: 
<code>validate:required,minLength=5</code> would presumably enforce that a 
field requires a value, and with at least five characters.</p><h3 
id="ComponentParameters-Translate:Bindings">Translate: Bindings</h3><p>The 
"translate:" binding prefix is also related to input vali
 dation. It is the name of a configured <a  class="external-link" 
href="http://tapestry.apache.org/current/apidocs/org/apache/tapestry5/Translator.html";>Translator</a>,
 responsible for converting between server-side and client-side representations 
of data (for instance, between client-side strings and server-side numeric 
values).</p><p>The list of available translators is configured by the <a  
class="external-link" 
href="http://tapestry.apache.org/current/apidocs/org/apache/tapestry5/services/TranslatorSource.html";>TranslatorSource</a>
 service.</p><h3 id="ComponentParameters-Asset:Bindings">Asset: 
Bindings</h3><p>Main Article: <a  href="assets.html">Assets</a></p><p>Assets 
bindings are used to specify <a  href="component-parameters.html">Component 
Parameters</a>, static content served by Tapestry. By default, assets are 
located relative to the component class in your packaged application or module. 
This can be overridden by prefixing the path with "context:", in which case, 
the path 
 is a context path from the root of the web application context. Because 
accessing context assets is relatively common, a separate "context:" binding 
prefix for that purpose exists (described below).</p><h3 
id="ComponentParameters-Context:Bindings">Context: Bindings</h3><p>Main 
Article: <a  href="assets.html">Assets</a></p><p>Context bindings are like 
asset bindings, but the path is <em>always</em> relative to the root of the web 
application context. This is intended for use inside templates, i.e.:</p><div 
class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent 
panelContent pdl">
 <pre class="brush: xml; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
style="font-size:12px;">  &lt;img src="${context:images/icon.png}"/&gt;
 </pre>
 </div></div><p>Tapestry will adjust the URL of the image so that it is 
processed by Tapestry, not the servlet container. It will gain a URL that 
includes the application's version number, it will have a far-future expires 
header, and (if the client supports it) its content will be compressed before 
being sent to the client.</p><h1 
id="ComponentParameters-@Parameterannotation">@Parameter annotation</h1><h3 
id="ComponentParameters-RequiredParameters">Required 
Parameters</h3><p>Parameters that are required <strong>must</strong> be bound. 
A runtime exception occurs if a component has unbound required 
parameters.</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div 
class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
@@ -295,7 +295,7 @@ public String getDefaultMessage(){&#160;
 </div></div></div><div class="columnMacro"><div class="code panel pdl" 
style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeHeader panelHeader pdl" 
style="border-bottom-width: 1px;"><b>This is wrong</b></div><div 
class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
 <pre class="brush: xml; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
style="font-size:12px;">&lt;img src="context:images/banner.png"/&gt;
 </pre>
-</div></div></div></div></div></div><h1 
id="ComponentParameters-InformalParameters">Informal Parameters</h1><p>Main 
Article: <a  href="component-parameters.html">Component 
Parameters</a></p><p>Many components support <em>informal parameters</em>, 
additional parameters beyond the formally defined parameters. Informal 
parameters will be rendered into the output as additional attributes on the tag 
rendered by the component. Generally speaking, components that have a 1:1 
relationship with a particular HTML tag (such as &lt;TextField&gt; and 
&lt;input&gt; will support informal parameters.</p><p>Only components whose 
class is annotated with @<a  class="external-link" 
href="http://tapestry.apache.org/current/apidocs/org/apache/tapestry5/annotations/SupportsInformalParameters.html";>SupportsInformalParameters</a>
 will support informal parameters. Tapestry silently drops informal parameters 
that are specified for components that do not have this 
annotation.</p><p>Informal parameters are often
  used to set the CSS class of an element, or to specify client-side event 
handlers.</p><p>The default binding prefix for informal parameters depends on 
<em>where</em> the parameter binding is specified. If the parameter is bound 
inside a Java class, within the @<a  class="external-link" 
href="http://tapestry.apache.org/current/apidocs/org/apache/tapestry5/annotations/Component.html";>Component</a>
 annotation, then the default binding prefix is "prop:". If the parameter is 
bound inside the component template, then the default binding prefix is 
"literal:". This reflects the fact that a parameter specified in the Java 
class, using the annotation, is most likely a computed value, whereas a value 
in the template should simply be copied, as is, into the result HTML 
stream.</p><p>Informal parameters (if supported) are always rendered into the 
output <em>unless</em> they are bound to a property whose value is null. If the 
bound property is null then the parameter will <em>not</em> be present
  at all in the rendered output.</p><p>If your component should render informal 
parameters, just inject the <a  class="external-link" 
href="http://tapestry.apache.org/current/apidocs/org/apache/tapestry5/ComponentResources.html";>ComponentResources</a>
 for your component and invoke the <code>renderInformalParameters()</code> 
method. See <a  href="component-parameters.html">Component Parameters</a> for 
an example of how to do this.</p><h1 
id="ComponentParameters-ParametersAreBi-Directional">Parameters Are 
Bi-Directional</h1><p>Parameters are not simply variables; each parameter 
represents a connection, or <em>binding</em>, between a component and a 
property of its container. When using the prop: binding prefix, the component 
can force changes <em>into</em> a property of its container, just by assigning 
a value to its own instance variable.</p><div class="code panel pdl" 
style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
+</div></div></div></div></div></div><h1 
id="ComponentParameters-InformalParameters">Informal Parameters</h1><p>Main 
Article: <a  href="supporting-informal-parameters.html">Supporting Informal 
Parameters</a></p><p>Many components support <em>informal parameters</em>, 
additional parameters beyond the formally defined parameters. Informal 
parameters will be rendered into the output as additional attributes on the tag 
rendered by the component. Generally speaking, components that have a 1:1 
relationship with a particular HTML tag (such as &lt;TextField&gt; and 
&lt;input&gt; will support informal parameters.</p><p>Only components whose 
class is annotated with @<a  class="external-link" 
href="http://tapestry.apache.org/current/apidocs/org/apache/tapestry5/annotations/SupportsInformalParameters.html";>SupportsInformalParameters</a>
 will support informal parameters. Tapestry silently drops informal parameters 
that are specified for components that do not have this 
annotation.</p><p>Informal 
 parameters are often used to set the CSS class of an element, or to specify 
client-side event handlers.</p><p>The default binding prefix for informal 
parameters depends on <em>where</em> the parameter binding is specified. If the 
parameter is bound inside a Java class, within the @<a  class="external-link" 
href="http://tapestry.apache.org/current/apidocs/org/apache/tapestry5/annotations/Component.html";>Component</a>
 annotation, then the default binding prefix is "prop:". If the parameter is 
bound inside the component template, then the default binding prefix is 
"literal:". This reflects the fact that a parameter specified in the Java 
class, using the annotation, is most likely a computed value, whereas a value 
in the template should simply be copied, as is, into the result HTML 
stream.</p><p>Informal parameters (if supported) are always rendered into the 
output <em>unless</em> they are bound to a property whose value is null. If the 
bound property is null then the parameter will <em
 >not</em> be present at all in the rendered output.</p><p>If your component 
 >should render informal parameters, just inject the <a  class="external-link" 
 >href="http://tapestry.apache.org/current/apidocs/org/apache/tapestry5/ComponentResources.html";>ComponentResources</a>
 > for your component and invoke the <code>renderInformalParameters()</code> 
 >method. See&#160;<a  href="supporting-informal-parameters.html">Supporting 
 >Informal Parameters</a> for an example of how to do this.</p><h1 
 >id="ComponentParameters-ParametersAreBi-Directional">Parameters Are 
 >Bi-Directional</h1><p>Parameters are not simply variables; each parameter 
 >represents a connection, or <em>binding</em>, between a component and a 
 >property of its container. When using the prop: binding prefix, the component 
 >can force changes <em>into</em> a property of its container, just by 
 >assigning a value to its own instance variable.</p><div class="code panel 
 >pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
 <pre class="brush: xml; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
style="font-size:12px;">&lt;t:layout 
xmlns:t="http://tapestry.apache.org/schema/tapestry_5_3.xsd"&gt;
     &lt;p&gt; Countdown:
         &lt;t:count start="5" end="1" result="index"&gt;
@@ -375,7 +375,7 @@ public class Title {
     return String.format("Maximum field length is %d.", maxLength);
   }
 </pre>
-</div></div><p>This form is more like using the "literal:" binding prefix, 
except that the literal value is computed by the defaultMessage() 
method.</p><p>Obviously, this is a lot more work than simply specifying a 
default value as part of the @Parameter annotation. In the few real cases where 
this is approach is used, the default binding method will usually deduce a 
proper binding, typically in terms of the component's id. For example, the 
TextField component will deduce a value parameter that binds to a property of 
its container with the same name.</p><p>A default binding method will 
<em>only</em> be invoked if the @Parameter annotation does not provide a 
default value.</p><h1 id="ComponentParameters-UnboundParameters">Unbound 
Parameters</h1><p>If a parameter is not bound (and is optional), then the value 
may be read or <em>updated</em> at any time.</p><p>Updates to unbound 
parameters cause no side effects. In the first example, the value parameter of 
the Count component is not bo
 und, and this is perfectly valid.</p><p>Note: updates to such fields are 
temporary; when the component <em>finishes rendering</em>, the field will 
revert to its default value.</p><h1 
id="ComponentParameters-ParameterTypeCoercion">Parameter Type 
Coercion</h1><p>Main Article: <a  href="component-parameters.html">Component 
Parameters</a></p><p>Tapestry includes a mechanism for <span 
class="confluence-link">coercing types automatically</span>. Most often, this 
is used to convert literal strings into appropriate values, but in many cases, 
more complex conversions will occur. This mechanism is used for component 
parameters, such as when an outer component passes a literal string to an inner 
component that is expecting an integer.</p><p>You can easily <a  
href="component-parameters.html">contribute new coercions</a> for your own 
purposes.</p><h1 id="ComponentParameters-ParameterNames">Parameter 
Names</h1><p>By default, Tapestry converts from the field name to the parameter 
name, by strippi
 ng off leading "$" and "_" characters.</p><p>This can be overridden using the 
name() attribute of the @Parameter annotation.</p><h1 
id="ComponentParameters-DeterminingifBound">Determining if Bound</h1><p>In rare 
cases, you may want to take different behaviors based on whether a parameter is 
bound or not. This can be accomplished by querying the component's resources, 
which can be <a  href="component-parameters.html">injected</a> into the 
component using the @<a  class="external-link" 
href="http://tapestry.apache.org/current/apidocs/org/apache/tapestry5/ioc/annotations/Inject.html";>Inject</a>
 annotation:</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div 
class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
+</div></div><p>This form is more like using the "literal:" binding prefix, 
except that the literal value is computed by the defaultMessage() 
method.</p><p>Obviously, this is a lot more work than simply specifying a 
default value as part of the @Parameter annotation. In the few real cases where 
this is approach is used, the default binding method will usually deduce a 
proper binding, typically in terms of the component's id. For example, the 
TextField component will deduce a value parameter that binds to a property of 
its container with the same name.</p><p>A default binding method will 
<em>only</em> be invoked if the @Parameter annotation does not provide a 
default value.</p><h1 id="ComponentParameters-UnboundParameters">Unbound 
Parameters</h1><p>If a parameter is not bound (and is optional), then the value 
may be read or <em>updated</em> at any time.</p><p>Updates to unbound 
parameters cause no side effects. In the first example, the value parameter of 
the Count component is not bo
 und, and this is perfectly valid.</p><p>Note: updates to such fields are 
temporary; when the component <em>finishes rendering</em>, the field will 
revert to its default value.</p><h1 
id="ComponentParameters-ParameterTypeCoercion">Parameter Type 
Coercion</h1><p>Main Article:&#160;<a  
href="parameter-type-coercion.html">Parameter Type Coercion</a> </p><p>Tapestry 
includes a mechanism for <span class="confluence-link">coercing types 
automatically</span>. Most often, this is used to convert literal strings into 
appropriate values, but in many cases, more complex conversions will occur. 
This mechanism is used for component parameters, such as when an outer 
component passes a literal string to an inner component that is expecting an 
integer.</p><p>You can easily <a  href="component-parameters.html">contribute 
new coercions</a> for your own purposes.</p><h1 
id="ComponentParameters-ParameterNames">Parameter Names</h1><p>By default, 
Tapestry converts from the field name to the parameter name
 , by stripping off leading "$" and "_" characters.</p><p>This can be 
overridden using the name() attribute of the @Parameter annotation.</p><h1 
id="ComponentParameters-DeterminingifBound">Determining if Bound</h1><p>In rare 
cases, you may want to take different behaviors based on whether a parameter is 
bound or not. This can be accomplished by querying the component's resources, 
which can be <a  href="component-parameters.html">injected</a> into the 
component using the @<a  class="external-link" 
href="http://tapestry.apache.org/current/apidocs/org/apache/tapestry5/ioc/annotations/Inject.html";>Inject</a>
 annotation:</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div 
class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
 <pre class="brush: java; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
style="font-size:12px;">public class MyComponent
 {
   @Parameter

Modified: 
websites/production/tapestry/content/overriding-exception-reporting.html
==============================================================================
--- websites/production/tapestry/content/overriding-exception-reporting.html 
(original)
+++ websites/production/tapestry/content/overriding-exception-reporting.html 
Tue Feb 13 02:20:37 2018
@@ -118,7 +118,7 @@
 </div>
 
 
-<p>Of course, one of the first questions anyone asks is "How do I turn it 
off?" This exception reporting is very helpful for developers but its easy to 
see it as terrifying for potential users. Catching runtime exceptions can be a 
very useful way of handling rarely occurring exceptions even in production, and 
there's no reason to throw away Tapestry's default error reporting just to 
handle a few specific exceptions. From version 5.4 (for previous versions, the 
same functionality is available as a <a  class="external-link" 
href="http://www.tynamo.org/tapestry-exceptionpage+guide/"; 
rel="nofollow">third-party module tapestry-exceptionpage</a>), you can 
contribute exception handles and/or exception pages for specific exception 
types. Refer back to <a  href="overriding-exception-reporting.html">Overriding 
Exception Reporting</a> page for more information. Read on if you want to 
completely replace Tapestry's default exception handling.</p><h2 
id="OverridingExceptionReporting-Version1:Repl
 acingtheExceptionReportPage">Version 1: Replacing the Exception Report 
Page</h2><p>Let's start with a page that fires an exception from an event 
handler method.</p><div class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div 
class="codeHeader panelHeader pdl" style="border-bottom-width: 
1px;"><b>ActionFail.tml</b></div><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
+<p>Of course, one of the first questions anyone asks is "How do I turn it 
off?" This exception reporting is very helpful for developers but its easy to 
see it as terrifying for potential users. Catching runtime exceptions can be a 
very useful way of handling rarely occurring exceptions even in production, and 
there's no reason to throw away Tapestry's default error reporting just to 
handle a few specific exceptions. From version 5.4 (for previous versions, the 
same functionality is available as a <a  class="external-link" 
href="http://www.tynamo.org/tapestry-exceptionpage+guide/"; 
rel="nofollow">third-party module tapestry-exceptionpage</a>), you can 
contribute exception handles and/or exception pages for specific exception 
types. Refer back to&#160;<a  href="runtime-exceptions.html">Runtime 
Exceptions</a> page for more information. Read on if you want to completely 
replace Tapestry's default exception handling.</p><h2 
id="OverridingExceptionReporting-Version1:ReplacingtheExceptionRe
 portPage">Version 1: Replacing the Exception Report Page</h2><p>Let's start 
with a page that fires an exception from an event handler method.</p><div 
class="code panel pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeHeader 
panelHeader pdl" style="border-bottom-width: 
1px;"><b>ActionFail.tml</b></div><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
 <pre class="brush: xml; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
style="font-size:12px;"> &lt;html 
xmlns:t="http://tapestry.apache.org/schema/tapestry_5_4.xsd"; t:type="layout" 
title="Action Fail"&gt;
         &lt;p&gt;
             &lt;t:actionlink t:id="fail" class="btn btn-large 
btn-warning"&gt;Click for Exception&lt;/t:actionlink&gt;

Modified: websites/production/tapestry/content/switching-cases.html
==============================================================================
--- websites/production/tapestry/content/switching-cases.html (original)
+++ websites/production/tapestry/content/switching-cases.html Tue Feb 13 
02:20:37 2018
@@ -80,7 +80,7 @@
                 <div id="ConfluenceContent"><p>&#160;</p><h1 
id="SwitchingCases-SwitchingCases">Switching Cases</h1><p>With Tapestry's 
<code>If</code> component you can only test one condition at a time. In order 
to distinguish multiple cases, you'd have to write complex nested if/else 
constructs in your page template and have a checker method for each test inside 
your page class.</p><div class="navmenu" style="float:right; background:#eee; 
margin:3px; padding:0 1em">
 <p>    <strong>JumpStart Demo:</strong><br clear="none">
     <a  class="external-link" 
href="http://jumpstart.doublenegative.com.au/jumpstart/examples/lang/ifnotnegateswitchelseunless";
 rel="nofollow">If, Not, Negate, Switch, Else, Unless</a></p></div>In cases 
where you have to distinguish multiple cases, the <code>Delegate</code> 
component comes in. It delegates rendering to some other component, for example 
a <code>Block</code>. For each case you have, you basically wrap the content 
inside a <code>Block</code> that doesn't get rendered by default. You then 
place a Delegate component on your page and point it to a method inside your 
page class that will decide which of your Blocks should be rendered.<p>Imagine 
for example a use case, where you want to distinguish between 4 cases and you 
have an int property called <code>whichCase</code> that should be tested 
against. Your page template would look as follows:</p><div class="code panel 
pdl" style="border-width: 1px;"><div class="codeHeader panelHeader pdl" 
style="border-bottom-width: 1px;">
 <b>SwitchMe.tml</b></div><div class="codeContent panelContent pdl">
-<pre class="brush: xml; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
style="font-size:12px;">&lt;html 
xmlns:t="http://tapestry.apache.org/schema/tapestry_5_1_0.xsd"&gt;
+<pre class="brush: xml; gutter: false; theme: Default" 
style="font-size:12px;">&lt;html 
xmlns:t="http://tapestry.apache.org/schema/tapestry_5_4.xsd"&gt;
     &lt;body&gt;
         &lt;h1&gt;Switch&lt;/h1&gt;
 


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