Yes, the naming gets a little odd when you start using consequetive
uppercase letters.

For instance, bean.UIDisplayLabel for getUIDisplayLabel()

You might try userSettingsBean.QType.


On 12/20/06, Mikael Andersson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,
 I think it is the naming of the property "qType" which causes this.
 Just tried myself to make sure, because I thought it should work to have
one lowercase character before a uppercase one, but it didn't work for me
either.
 So renaming the property might solve you problem.

 - Mike

On 20/12/06, Greg Reddin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> BTW, here's the relevant portions of my managed beans since I'm sure
> someone will ask me to check my spelling, etc :-)
>
> public class ReportingBean extends ActionController {
> ....
>    private String qType;
> ...
>    public String getQType() {
>        return qType;
>    }
>
>    public void setQType(String qType) {
>        this.qType = qType;
>    }
>
> }
>
> public class UserSettingsBean extends ActionController  {
> ....
>    private String qType;
> ...
>    public String getQType() {
>        return qType;
>    }
>
>    public void setQType(String qType) {
>        this.qType = qType;
>    }
>
> }
>
> Thanks,
> Greg
>


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