On 7/19/06, Matthias Wessendorf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

DynaFaces ?

even google knows nothing about it :)

sounds like my old "friends" DynaActionForm ... :)


Sorry ... was thinking of something different.  The "avatar" stuff at
jsf-extensions is what I was thinking about.

Craig

On 7/19/06, Craig McClanahan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 7/19/06, Carl Sziebert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > Hello all:
> >
> > Let me preface my message with this: I am relatively new to Shale and
> > the remoting capabilities it has to offer.  I am curious to understand
> > the functionality better.  I'd like to know if it is possible to pull
> > in the contents of a JSP in as part of the response. If so, can the
> > JSP have JSF tags in it and how would I go about this? I have a
> > backing bean defined in my config file as
> > <managed-bean-name>remoting$cartHandler</managed-bean-name> and am
> > successfully calling the addItem method. (ex:
> >
sendRequest("/concierge/dynamic/remoting$cartHandler/addItem.jsf?hotelId="
> > + escape(id), cartHandlerCallback); )  If this is possible, I am
> > assuming that I'll still have to call context.responseComplete(),
> > correct?
>
>
> It would be technically feasible to use remoting for this purpose,
although
> it is not a first class use case.  The general idea would be to use the
"web
> application resource" mechanism (which is  the same thing you'd use to
> download a static CSS stylesheet or javascript file, for
example).  Instead
> of a context-relative URL like:
>
>     /webapp/foo/bar.css
>
> you would use a URL like
>
>     /webapp/foo/bar.faces
>
> (assuming you are using *.faces mapping).
>
> That all being said, however, I suspect that Shale Remoting is not the
best
> approach if what you are after is dynamic responses that are constructed
> with JSF components.  You might want to look at some of the component
based
> solutions that support "partial page refresh" -- the MyFaces component
> libraries (including the incubator "Trinidad" library, which was
originally
> ADF Faces).  Another interesting technology to look at is the DynaFaces
> facility that is part of the jsf-extensions[1] library at java.net.
>
> Craig
>
> [1] https://jsf-extensions.dev.java.net/
>
>
> Thanks in advance.
> >
> > Carl
> >
>
>


--
Matthias Wessendorf

further stuff:
blog: http://jroller.com/page/mwessendorf
mail: mwessendorf-at-gmail-dot-com

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