I have had no trouble working with maps and collections of all kinds.

On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 2:48 PM, danny van elsen
<[email protected]> wrote:
> ok, given
> public class StringRow
> {
>  public String N;
>
>  public ArrayList <String> sr;
>
>  public StringRow(Integer i)
>  {
>   sr = new ArrayList <String> ();
>   N = "heej" + Integer.toString(i) ;
>  }
>
>  public String getsr(Integer i)
>  {
>   return sr.get(i);
>  }
>
>  public String getN()
>  {
>   return N;
>  }
>  }
>
> and the template
> #foreach( $res in $result )
> -hallo-
>      <td>  {$res}.size() </td>
>      <td>  $res.N </td>
> #end
>
> I now get
> -hallo-
>         <td>  {velsd.string...@7854a328}.size() </td>
>      <td>  heej01 </td>
> -hallo-
>         <td>  {velsd.string...@7ca3d4cf}.size() </td>
>      <td>  heej02 </td>
> and so on
>
> is there any way that the $res in
> #foreach( $res in $result )
> can itself refer to a new array?
>
> reading the documentation, I was led to believe that this array could be
> a ArrayList, but perhaps it has to be a fixed size array?
>
> greetings, danny.
>
>
>
> On Sat, 2010-02-13 at 15:34 -0700, ChadDavis wrote:
>
>> Those braces go around everything in the velocity reference.
>>
>> ${res}.getN()
>>
>> should be
>>
>> ${res.getN()}
>>
>
>
>

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