I suspect when you were using the ip address rather than localhost, the GWT
Dev Plugin was unable to connect to the GWT code server. As a result it was
not able to load (actually inject) the dynamic portions of your project
(e.g. all of the GWT Java code). This is typically a result of some securit
Hi Chris
Yes - using localhost:9997 did solve the problem! Thank you.
I could create the project before but not debug it - it didn't even
call the Java code, as I explained it showed only the static HTML.
Can you explain the difference?
Thanks
Yuval
On Dec 22, 5:50 pm, Chris Ramsdale wrote:
> Y
Yuval,
Can you successfully create, and debug, a new project from Eclipse? Also,
does it help if you set gwt.codesvr=localhost:9997?
On Tue, Dec 22, 2009 at 5:58 AM, Yuval wrote:
> Hello everybody,
>
> I am new to GWT and need some help. I have recently downloaded GWT 2.0
> as an Ecplise plugi
Hello everybody,
I am new to GWT and need some help. I have recently downloaded GWT 2.0
as an Ecplise plugin + SDK.
Following the "Getting started" tutorial I have created a new GWT
application project in Eclipse, StockWatcher. I have made no changes
to the generated application.
The application