I'm interested in this problem, too... question below.

> Then what I did was I installed Tortoise SVN and Apache Web Server (not
> Tomcat) on the designers machine.  Also on their machine, I created a
> wwwroot/myproject directory and under there I linked:
> 
> wwwroot
>   - myproject
>        -  home  -> svn://...src/main/resources/..../home
>        -  user  -> svn://...src/main/resources/..../user
>        -  css   -> svn://...src/main/webapp/css
>        -  img   -> svn://...src/main/webapp/img
> 
> Then I configured apache for that directory, and that's the "test website"
> Dreamweaver launches after they make edits and want to preview.  When the
> designer is all done, they do an SVN Commit through Tortoise.

I don't quite understand this second part. What do you mean by you
"linked" wwroot/blah/blah" to "svn://blah/blah"? You mean you just
checked out svn into that dir?

Why do you need to install Apache on the client machine if you're just
using static files? Can't your designer just access with the file://
url?

Finally, the most important thing for the designer is to view the stuff
in context. It doesn't mean much for the designer to see this html:

<wicket:panel>
  <div wicket:id="someReallyComplicatedComponent"/>
</wicket:panel>

Are you saying you don't set up anything so your designers can view
someReallyComplicatedComponent in context with the application?


Cheers,
David



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