It's a basic principle of JSF that every link needs JavaScript. The problem is with the sizes of the state of a modern web-application: it is (almost) impossible to cut this state down to sizes which can be transferred via a link without IE restricting this.
So what JSF does is posting the form with a click on a link - as tree2 relies on links, you have the same issue here... regards, Martin On 11/15/06, Sawan Vithlani <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
So it's not possible to do this, for example, with the node being an HTML link back to the appropriate submission? Sawan On 11/15/06, Andrew Robinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > JavaScript is required. Even with server side state toggling, the > javascript is what submits the tree when the icon is clicked. > > On 11/14/06, Sawan Vithlani <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hello all, > > > > I'm currently evaluating some JSF controls and one of our requirements > > is that we be able to use the Tree control when Javascript is > > unavailable on the client side. > > > > I have downloaded and tried the Tomahawk examples. > > > > The Tree2 control example given > > (http://localhost:8080/myfaces-example-simple-1.1.5-SNAPSHOT/tree2.jsf, > > assuming a local installation) does not seem to work without > > Javascript. The description here: > > http://myfaces.apache.org/tomahawk/tree2.html says that "...there is > > an option for client-side or server-side toggling of the > > expand/collapse state. " I take this to mean that the whole tree is > > submit to the server, and comes back with the clicked node expanded, > > and that this operation was performed without Javascript. > > > > Was I correct in assuming this? If no, is there any other way in which > > this behaviour can be acheived? > > > > Thanks > > > > Sawan > > >
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