is keeping its community in the dark by withholding information
is a bit ironic, and some might call this hypocritical. Thanks again for
the reassurance.
-tjw
On Monday, April 30, 2012 10:54:35 AM UTC-4, Eric Clayberg (Google) wrote:
The Dart project is also not based in ATL and most
?
On Feb 10, 1:47 pm, Eric Clayberg (Google) clayb...@google.com
wrote:
Have you tried opening a UI file (UiBinder XML file or GWT Java file)
using
the GWT Designer editor?
If you are having problems using GWT Designer, I would highly
recommend
taking a look
You can send your questions to me.
On Wednesday, May 2, 2012 5:49:24 AM UTC-4, brent777 wrote:
Hi,
I was trying to contact the GWT owner via the link on the GWT Articles
page. However, when I try send the message I am just presented with an
error page. It suggests that I report the error
GWT is not based in ATL and we are definitely not axing it. GWT has been
based in Mountain View for most of the past year and that is where all of
the GWT 2.5 work that Ray Cromwell references is being done. GWT 2.5 has
taken a bit longer to get out than we originally planned, but it also
The Dart project is also not based in ATL and most definitely is not being
cut in any way, shape or form.
It continues to do extremely well and is on track for a major release later
this year.
On Thursday, April 26, 2012 1:34:31 PM UTC-4, dka...@gmail.com wrote:
Yes I am aware of this. There
You would need to install GWT Designer.
On Wednesday, March 28, 2012 2:59:57 AM UTC-4, suleyman wrote:
Hello,
I am new to gwt and try to make a simple website with indigo.
I have installed gwt plugin and also window builder but when I
navigate to Window Preferences WindowBuilder,
We should fix that ;-)
On Tuesday, March 6, 2012 4:41:04 PM UTC-5, Alan Leung wrote:
I think that's just the mirror script being broken and changes are not
mirrored to the SVN.
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The GWT team is currently focused on an arc of work that has not been
released to the external repo yet.
On Monday, March 5, 2012 3:24:10 PM UTC-5, Curtis Stanford wrote:
I noticed there haven't been any commits to the SVN repository for over a
month. Is the writing on the wall for GWT or
There is a difference between legitimate differences in behavior between
browsers (which GWT will try to shield you from) and outright bugs in one
specific browser (that should be fixed in that browser). What you described
sounded like an actual bug in FireFox, so it should be addressed at that
1) GWT Designer is an Editor, not a View. It won't just appear unless you
open either a GWT Java or UiBinder file using the GWT Designer Editor.
I would recommend reviewing the GWT Designer
docshttp://code.google.com/webtoolkit/tools/gwtdesigner/index.html
.
2) Based on your description, you
Is there any thing on GWT broken when I use it with eclipse 3.7?
No. Eclipse 3.5 and above are all supported...
http://code.google.com/eclipse/docs/download.html
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Have you tried opening a UI file (UiBinder XML file or GWT Java file) using
the GWT Designer editor?
If you are having problems using GWT Designer, I would highly recommend
taking a look at the
docshttp://code.google.com/webtoolkit/tools/gwtdesigner/index.html
.
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It works just fine when I try it. The drop zones for the FlexTable are on
its sides (and cell boundaries) once it has its first child. See the GWT
Designer FlexTable docs...
http://code.google.com/webtoolkit/tools/gwtdesigner/layoutmanagers/gwt/flextable.html
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That will depend on the SmartGWT developers (or any community members that
want to use it). We (Google) have no plans to provide support
for SmartGWT 3.0 on our end. Support for SmartGWT 3.0 is a big project, and
now that GWT Designer is open source along with the rest of GPE, this is a
What is the size of the resulting application in both cases?
Quite a few new compiler optimizations went into GWT between 1.7 and 2.3,
so I would expect compilation time to increase quite a bit if you have all
of those new optimization turned on.
There are compiler flags you can turn on to
That memo was written quite some time ago (in Internet time), and a leaked
memo like that should not be considered to be Gospel or a roadmap.
Dart and GWT each have their own goals and will both co-exist for a very
long time. I am not aware of any current plan for Dart to replace GWT. As
You have a JDK version mismatch between the JDK you are using to run
Eclipse and the one you are using to compile your code. Make sure you are
running Eclipse with the latest JDK.
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GPE includes GWT Designer.
The Android feature requires that you install the Android tools (ADT) first.
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Also note that the GPE (and tools like GWT Designer) are Eclipse only.
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http://code.google.com/p/gwt-designer/downloads/list
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What version of GWT Designer and/or GPE are you using? It looks like you
are using an old one.
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Looks like some sort of local communication failure on your end. I just
tried the update site and it was fine.
Try restarting Eclipse and trying it again.
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A nice follow-up...
http://community.jboss.org/en/tools/blog/2011/11/16/thoughts-on-google-eclipse-plugins-going-open-source
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The Dart Editor team is primarily focused on the standalone RCP-based
editor as it gives a much better experience (e.g., smaller and much faster)
than would an Eclipse plugin running in Eclipse. At the moment, we don't
have plans to provide a plugin for Eclipse, but most of the pieces are
See... http://googlewebtoolkit.blogspot.com/2011/11/gwt-and-dart.html
The Google Web Toolkit team has been asked recently about our plans
following the announcement of the Dart programming
languagehttp://dartlang.org/ a
few weeks ago.
Dart and GWT both share the goal of enabling structured
See... http://googlewebtoolkit.blogspot.com/2011/11/gwt-and-dart.html
The Google Web Toolkit team has been asked recently about our plans
following the announcement of the Dart programming
languagehttp://dartlang.org/ a
few weeks ago.
Dart and GWT both share the goal of enabling structured
Have you tried opening one of your GWT UI classes (Java or UiBinder) with
the WindowBuilder Editor (as shown in the docs)?
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It should be available in the latest GWT Designer build.
Heres how to use it...
1. Create a GWT project with a GWT module, moduleA.gwt.xml file.
2. Create a second GWT module, moduleB.gwt.xml in the same folder.
3. If you want to make sure that GWT Designer uses moduleB.gwt.xml, add the
That usually means that you had a communication interruption. Waiting 5
minutes, restarting Eclipse, and trying it again will almost always solve
the problem. If it dos not, you should also turn off any firewall you have
turned on.
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Please update to the latest GWT Designer build.
We have also added support for Ubuntu 11.10.
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GWT Designer does not use standard Java localization; it uses the standard
GWT localization. The correct link from the GWT Designer docs is...
http://code.google.com/webtoolkit/tools/gwtdesigner/features/gwt/internationalization.html
The link you posted is actually part of the shared WB docs
GWT Designer is based upon the open source
WindowBuilderhttp://eclipse.org/windowbuilder/project at Eclipse.org. You
would need to create your own plugin to extract
that info, so you should look at the WB code itself. If you have questions
about WB, you should post them to the WindowBuilder
First, this is way off topic for this forum. You should post WindowBuilder
questions/comments to the WindowBuilder
forumhttp://eclipse.org/forums/index.php?t=threadfrm_id=214
.
Second, the behavior you describe in WindowBuilder is quite intentional
(i.e., not allowing you to create loose
It sounds like you are using an ancient version of GWT Designer
(pre-Google), so you should uninstall that version and then re-install the
current
versionhttp://code.google.com/webtoolkit/tools/download-gwtdesigner-beta.html(use
the Eclipse 3.5 build). It is free and does not require a
Yes. It should work for Eclipse 3.5 or higher and GWT/GPE 2.2 and higher.
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The Google Plugin for Eclipse includes a simplified version of GWT Designer
that does not include any project (or New Wizard) options. Those are
provided by GPE itself.
You will need to install the full version of GWT Designer to see any of its
wizards. You don't need them, however. Creating a
That is good advice. In addition to the active GWT development team, there
is a fairly large group of ex-GWT team members who are still committers on
the project and working on it during their Google 20% time. If you happen to
pick the wrong person, we should be able to correct it quickly.
--
This is caused by incompatibility between Linux versions and inconsistent
library naming across versions and distros.
As a work around you can...
1) Open terminal and change dir to /usr/lib.
2) Execute sudo ln -s libwebkitgtk-1.0.so.0.6.0 libwebkit-1.0.so.2 command,
where
It was somewhat of a coincidence as we were starting a small project to
clean up and triage the issue tracker (which had been unfortunately
neglected for awhile). We definitely took notice of your post and looked at
each of the issues you referenced.
PatchesWelcome does indeed mean that we
Nothing at the library level has changed in GWT Designer any time recently.
The requirements under Linux are (and have been for quite some time)
libwebkit.so or xulrunner-1.9.x. GWT Designer tries to use WebKit first. If
it isn't available for some reason (older Linux distro or wrong/different
Exactly right. Keep in mind that we (Google) have over 1000 current projects
using GWT, and GWT is used for some of our largest, most important projects.
If you are building large, complex GWT apps, things like compiler
optimizations and code splitting are critical. Conversely, there are
This is expected behavior at design time since you can't call RPC code at
design time.
You need to wrapper calls to RPC code with Beans.isDesignTime() checks.
Please see the docs...
http://code.google.com/webtoolkit/tools/gwtdesigner/features/gwt/enhanced_compilation.html#isDesignTime
--
At least for the moment, that is intentional.
As you probably know, the GWT issue tracker has not had a lot of love
lately, and we would like to fix that. We are undertaking a multi-week
project to triage as many of the open issues as we can. We would like to
close stale, invalid, fixed
You make some good points, so we have reverted it back to open.
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The CSS
editorhttp://code.google.com/webtoolkit/tools/gwtdesigner/features/gwt/css_support.htmlyou
refer to has actually be in the tool for a very long time. It was
originally designed to support editing of global CSS styles referenced from
HTML or from gwt.xml files. In the most recent GPE /
In general, you can add new GWT widgets to the palette by using the palette
context
menuhttp://code.google.com/javadevtools/wbpro/userinterface/palette_context_menu.htmlor
the Palette
Managerhttp://code.google.com/javadevtools/wbpro/userinterface/palette_manager.html
.
It looks like the answer is actually in the error message itself.
You have two center elements where you are only allowed to have one.
If you want both panels there, you would need to contain the both in a
single panel that is the sole center element.
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Support for JDK 1.5 was indeed deprecated when GWT 2.2 was released.
According to the release
noteshttp://code.google.com/webtoolkit/doc/2.2/ReleaseNotes.html#Java15
...
Version 2.2 will have only deprecated support for Java 1.5, resulting in
warnings when building applications. While Java 1.5
Did you try the *Editor Layout* preference?
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Did you install GWT Designer?
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Layout assistants are available for some of the complex GXT and GWT Ext
layouts.
The standard GWT panels don't have any as they don't need them.
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http://code.google.com/webtoolkit/tools/gwtdesigner/preferences/gwt/images/preferences_gpe_designer.png
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The *Google Web Toolkit Designer Editor Layout* pref is only available
from the GPE update site.
If you install the full version of GWT Designer from its own update site,
you have to look at the *WindowBuilder** Editor Layout *pref instead.
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Click OK. That isn't a problem that you need to solve.
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No. Now that Eclipse 3.7 is out, we no longer support 3.4.
Our general policy is to support the current release plus the two most
recent prior releases.
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In the latest GWT Designer release, it will ensure that edge widgets are
added before the center widget when creating a Java UI.
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You should use the take a look at the
*Preferences*http://code.google.com/webtoolkit/tools/gwtdesigner/preferences/gwt/preferences_gpe_designer.html
.
http://code.google.com/webtoolkit/tools/gwtdesigner/preferences/gwt/images/preferences_gpe_designer.png
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If you want everything, you should install the GPE first followed by the
full version of GWT Designer. They can easily co-exist in the same Eclipse
environment.
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The download page already states that you you should Download this version
for its extra features, or if you use GXT, GWT-Ext or SmartGWT.
The 2.2 Release
Noteshttp://code.google.com/webtoolkit/doc/2.2/ReleaseNotes.htmlalso discuss
the differences and what you get by installing the full
StackLayoutPanel does not provide enough API to get the required design time
information (such as the headers). We resort to hacks to get access to that
info for StackLayoutPanel itself at design time.
It is unlikely that you can create a compatible sub-class of
StackLayoutPanel, because there
*Tools to help monetize and mobilize your development: Announcing the Google
Plugin for Eclipse
2.4http://googlewebtoolkit.blogspot.com/2011/09/tools-to-help-monetize-and-mobilize.html
*
*
*
At this year’s Google I/O conference, we
No idea. That works pretty fast on our end, but it would be helpful to see a
complete test case project.
If you can profile Eclipse or take thread snapshots at various points during
that minute, it would be very helpful.
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We are still unable to reproduce this. I think we need to see a complete
test case project as well as your Eclipse preferences.
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Those 3rd party features are only supported by the full version of GWT
Designer available
herehttp://code.google.com/webtoolkit/tools/download-gwtdesigner-beta.html
.
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Thanks for the thread dump, but it just raies more questions. There are a
huge number of threads shown which seem to be hanging around for some
unknown reason. The thread dump has no stack trace for any of them.
Try running Eclipse from command line (or use eclipsec.exe), work a while
with
GWT Designer uses WebKit for rendering under Windows 7. Under XP, it has to
use IE. That means any widgets/layouts will only be displayed as well as IE
can render them. RootLayoutPanel requires strict mode which works much
better in modern browsers. IE6 is the cause of what you are seeing.
Hitting Ctrl+Break in the Console window should create a thread dump that
will show where it is hanging up.
What happens with a 1000 ms delay?
WHat happens if the editor is in tabbed mode and you switch from source to
design?
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I don't know what jetro is, but I don't see how typing anything at the
command line would have anything to do with GWT Designer.
Can you provide more details?
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What OS are you using?
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It's been available for about two months now (since Eclipse 3.7 shipped)...
http://dl.google.com/eclipse/plugin/3.7/zips/gpe-e37-latest-updatesite.zip
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No idea based on your description. GWT Designer doesn't perform any actions
on save, but lots of Eclipse and/or GPE stuff kicks in at that point (like
various validations).
You say you have 6GB of RAM, but how much do you have assigned to running
Eclipse (and GWT)? What does your Eclipse Heap
The update sites were off line yesterday for an hour or so. Those were
restored fairly quickly, but you need to restart Eclipse to see that take
effect (Eclipse caches update site status including failures for an entire
session).
The ZIP files are on line now as well.
Sorry for any
The update sites were off line yesterday for an hour or so. Those were
restored fairly quickly, but you need to restart Eclipse to see that take
effect (Eclipse caches update site status including failures for an entire
session).
Sorry for any inconvenience.
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Adding support for a new custom layout is a very complex task (there is no
magic Java Bean model for layouts, for example), but there are a lot of
example available. WindowBuilder (upon which GWT Designer is based) is an
open source project at Eclipse. There you will find full source code to
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