You are aware of what you are doing to your browser? There is a limit
to the pain you can cause. I'm calling the People for the Ethical
Treatment of Web Browsers!

Seriously: there is a limit to the number of form controls you can put
in a page (around ~1000 iirc)

Martijn

On 8/30/07, Antony Stubbs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I have a couple of pages with _very large forms_, that are also modified
> dynamically to set which fields are editable using javascript, dependant on
> the value of a drop down list. Please see the example image attached. And
> that's only the first page....
> the application is in - *gasp* - struts.
> I love what I've seen so far with Wicket, but I'm unsure what it's like to
> use compared to say, Stripes, Struts 2, Click, Tapestry etc when it comes to
> very large forms.
> being that setting up each field in wicket is kinda verbose...
>
>
> What are people's experiences? How do you find Wicket to use in very large
> forms? Thoughts? Ideas? Alternatives?
>
> (disclaimer - I've only written one page in Wicket, and that was just
> playing around with Ajax (NIIIICE!! :)))
>
> http://www.nabble.com/file/p12398507/bigForm.png
> --
> View this message in context: 
> http://www.nabble.com/Wicket-capability-for-LARGE-forms-tf4351285.html#a12398507
> Sent from the Wicket - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
>
>
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