You have to remove though some of the CSS IE conditionals from Twitter bootstrap.
They are still not correctly processed by Wicket. :-( *Bruno Borges* (11) 99564-9058 *www.brunoborges.com* On Thu, Oct 11, 2012 at 11:08 PM, Chris Colman <chr...@stepaheadsoftware.com > wrote: > >> Is it possible/feasible to 'selectively' use the Twitter bootstrap in > a > >> wicket app? > >> > >> Scenario: our app serves many different clients. Some will want the > >> Twitter Bootstrap look and feel but others will be happy to use any > >> number of existing CSS/JS templates that we have created for them > over > >> the years. > >> > >> Currently we use a combination of Wicket variations and conditional > >> header injection to provide different look and feel for customers > even > >> though they all use the same Wicket page classes. > >> > >> Is it possible to use Twitter Bootstrap in the same way? i.e. > >> conditionally use it when rendering a page for one customer but not > >> using it when rendering that same page class for another customer? > > > > > >It sounds like you already have the system for this built. Bootstrap > is > >just HTML and CSS, so keep doing what you were with the variations and > >different header contributions. Is there something else that you need? > > Probably not. I guess because it's purely HTML and CSS then it should > fit in nicely with our existing HTML/CSS selection code. > > > > >-- > >Jeremy Thomerson > >http://wickettraining.com > >*Need a CMS for Wicket? Use Brix! http://brixcms.org* > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org > >