You may not be connecting to the database. I have found that Torque.init()
running successfully does not necessarily mean that the database settings
are correct. Verify
that you have the db's jar file in your library. Verify that the username
and password
are correct. Once I spent hours trying this, trying that, then it seemed to
wok when
I corrected the database name to use proper capitalization. (I tried many
things, so
I cannot say for sure that was the problem.)
Steve B.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jacob Robert Wilkins" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Turbine Torque Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, May 03, 2002 2:14 PM
Subject: Re: Errors I don't understand....
> On Fri, May 03, 2002 at 05:01:24PM -0400, Eric Pugh wrote:
> > It is because you have not inited Torque first.. Therefore it has no
pools.
> >
> No, I'm calling init. What else could be causing a lack of pools?
>
> >
> <snip>
> >
> > Here is the actual code, omitting imports:
> >
> > public class Test
> > {
> > public static void main(String args[])
> > throws Exception
> > {
> > System.out.println("Starting CandidateTest");
> > Torque.init("Torque.properties");
> Right there, init is called, and it doesn't fail.
> > System.out.println("props read");
> > Candidate c = new Candidate();
> > System.out.println("instance created");
> > c.setOffice("President");
> > c.setName("Jacob Robert Wilkins");
> > c.setUrl("http://www.nplus1.net/");
> > c.setEmail("[EMAIL PROTECTED]");
> > c.setBio("Some really Long text");
> > c.setImage("/path/to/image");
> > c.setActive(true);
> > System.out.println("values set");
> > c.save();
> > System.out.println("save called");
> >
> >
> > System.out.println("Finished CandidateTest");
> >
> > }
> > }
>
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