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Hendy Irawan

HowToConfigureExtendedWADL - Jersey: RESTful Web services made easy - wikis.sun.com - 0 views

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    "This page describes how you can get an extended WADL from your REST app. It aligns mostly with the extended-wadl-webapp sample and uses these features: Add additional doc tags to the WADL Create JAXB beans from xsd - you might also create the schema from your beans Add the grammars element that includes the xsd file from which JAXB beans were generated to the WADL Add javadoc from your resource classes to the WADL, using most of the supported javadoc tags For getting the extended WADL as described above these things have to be done: Configure the maven-jaxb-plugin to create JAXB beans from xsd - this is described here just to describe what's done in the sample. Add the application-doc.xml and application-grammars.xml to the build classpath Configure the maven-javadoc-plugin with the ResourceDoclet provided by the wadl-resourcedoc-doclet artifact to create the resource-doc.xml. Create a subclass of WadlGeneratorConfig that defines/configures the WadlGenerators to use Specify your custom WadlGeneratorConfig in the web.xml as the WadlGeneratorConfig"
Manu PK

How to Write Doc Comments for the Javadoc Tool - 0 views

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    How to Write Doc Comments for the Javadoc Tool
Hendy Irawan

WADL - Jersey: RESTful Web services made easy - wikis.sun.com - 0 views

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    "Out of the box Jersey generates basic WADL at runtime that you can obtain from your REST app via GET http://path.to.your/restapp/application.wadl. Additionally you can configure Jersey to create an extended WADL including e.g. additional doc elements or javadoc read from your resource classes: There's a custom doclet that writes your javadoc to a file so that it can be used to extend the WADL. Additionally there's the maven-wadl-plugin that allows you to create the WADL without your running REST app."
anonymous

Organize Projects - Google Web Toolkit - Google Code - 0 views

  • com.google.gwt.gears.Gears
    • anonymous
       
      Gears.gwt.xml does not define andy entry point. It can only be inherits
  • two ways to approach loading them
  • nclude each module with a separate <script> tag
  • ...118 more annotations...
  • Create a top level module XML definition
  • Compile the top level module
  • the second approach will lead to much better end-user performance
  • each module has to be downloaded separately by the end-user's browser
  • each module will contain redundant copies of GWT library
  • conflict with each other during event handling
  • Linkers are divided into three categories, PRE, POST, and PRIMARY
  • one primary linker is run for a compilation
  • everal linkers are provided by Core.gwt.xml, which is automatically inherited by User.gwt.xml.
  • monolithic JavaScript file.
  • cross-site deployment model.
  • standard iframe-based
  • <add-linker name="xs" />
  • The GWT compiler
  • packaging its output with the Linker subsystem
  • responsible for the final packaging of the JavaScript code
  • providing a pluggable bootstrap mechanism
  • re-use an existing Java API for a GWT project,
  • <super-source>
  • "re-root" a source path
  • to emulate part of the JRE not implemented by GWT
  • tells the compiler to add all subfolders of com/example/myproject/jre/
  • to the source path
  • com/google/myproject/gwt/jre/java/util/UUID.java
  • most commonly used elements in the module XML file.
  • <inherits name="
  • herits all the settings from the specified module
  • <entry-point class=
  • Entry points are all compiled into a single codebase
  • when the onModuleLoad() of your first entry point finishes, the next entry point is called immediately.
  • Any number of entry-point classes can be added
  • <source path="
  • resources get copied into the output directory during a GWT compile.
  • client subpackage is implicitly added to the source path
  • <public path="path" />
  • treated as a publicly-accessible resource.
  • resources get copied into the output directory
  • the public subpackage is implicitly added to the public
  • <servlet
  • For RPC, this element loads a servlet class
  • mounted at the specified URL path
  • path=
    • anonymous
       
      monting location
  • class="
    • anonymous
       
      Which servlet class
  • URL path should be absolute
  • @RemoteServiceRelativePath attribute
  • you must configure a WEB-INF/web.xml in your war directory to load any servlets needed.
  • n development mode,
  • <script src="
  • external JavaScrip
  • <stylesheet src="
  • Extends the set of values
  • for an existing client property
  • <replace-with-class>
  • <generate-with-class>
  • <when-property-is
  • three different types of predicates are
  • <when-type-assignable
  • <when-type-is
  • <all>
  • <any>
  • <none>
  • GWT libraries are organized into modules
  • you want to inherit at least the User module
  • contains all the core GWT functionality
  • including the EntryPoint class
  • widgets and panels
  • History feature
  • Internationalization
  • DOM programming, and more
  • Low-level HTTP
  • Use the following syntax to cause an external JavaScript file to be loaded
  • before your module entry point is called.
  • as if you had included it explicitly using the HTML <script
  • loaded before your onModuleLoad() is called.
  • all included scripts will be loaded when your application starts, in the order in which they are declared.
  • associate external CSS files with your module
  • GWT.getModuleBaseURL() + "foo.css" in client code
  • module's public path
  • useful when
  • inheritance makes resource inclusion particularly convenient.
  • If you wish to create a reusable library that relies upon particular stylesheets or JavaScript files, you can be sure that clients
  • see the documentation for FileSet for a general overview
  • <public>
  • <super-source>
  • <source>
  • includes
  • excludes
  • defaultexcludes
  • casesensitive
  • By default, the patterns listed here are excluded.
  • defaultexcludes is true
  • <script src='myApp/myApp.nocache.js'></script>
  • <script> tags always block evaluation of the page
  • <img> tags do not block page evaluation
  • two simultaneous connections
  • The body.onload() event will only fire once all external resources are fetched, including images and frames.
  • GWT selection script
  • like a normal script tag
  • but the compiled script will be fetched asynchronously.
  • Parsing is blocked until externalScriptZero.js is done fetching and evaluating.
  • myApp/myApp.nocache.js completes
  • the compiled scrip
  • (<hashname>.cache.html
  • begins fetching in a hidden IFRAME (this is non-blocking).
  • onModuleLoad() is not called yet, as we're still waiting on externalScriptOne.js
  • body.onload() fires
  • onload='alert("w00t!")
    • anonymous
       
      is the last line executed
  • put the GWT selection script as early as possible
  • because it won't block any other script requests
  • <img> tags are not guaranteed to be done loading when onModuleLoad() is called
  • <script> tags are guaranteed to be done loading when onModuleLoad() is called
  • multiple EntryPoints
  • will all be called in sequence as soon as that module (and the outer document) is ready
  • multiple GWT modules within the same page
  • each module's EntryPoint will be called as soon as both that module and the outer document is ready
  • EntryPoints are not guaranteed to fire at the same time
  • or in the same order
  • in which their selection scripts were specified in the host page
Hendy Irawan

enunciate - 0 views

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    "Enunciate is an engine for dramatically enhancing your Java Web service API. It's simple. You develop your Web service API using standard Java technologies and attach Enunciate to your build process. Suddenly, your Web service API is boasting some pretty impressive features: Full HTML documentation of your services, scraped from your JavaDocs. Client-side libraries (e.g. Java, .NET, iPhone, Ruby, Flex, AJAX, GWT, etc.) for developers who want to interface with your API. Interface Definition Documents (e.g. WSDL, XML-Schema, etc.) Etc."
anonymous

untitled - 0 views

  • initWidget(uiBinder.createAndBindUi(this));
    • anonymous
       
      To inizialize the "menber variable" whith the widget object described in the XML view despription
  • uiBinder.createAndBindUi(this)
  • GWT compiler won't actually visit this URL to fetch the file, because a copy of it is baked into the compiler
  • ...15 more annotations...
  • @UiField have default visibility
  • UIObject
  • DivElement
  • If your factory method needs arguments, those will be required as attributes.
  • Every widget that is declared in a template is created by a call to GWT.create().
  • @UiConstructor annotation.
  • you can mark your own widgets with
  • CricketScores has no default (zero args) constructor
  • you can define a @UiFactory method on the UiBinder's owner
  • annotate a constructor of CricketScores with @UiConstructor.
  •   @UiFactory
  • public class UserDashboard extends Composite {  interface MyUiBinder extends UiBinder<Widget, UserDashboard> {}  private static MyUiBinder uiBinder = GWT.create(MyUiBinder.class);  public UserDashboard() {    initWidget(uiBinder.createAndBindUi(this));  }}
  • use several different XML templates for the same view
  • public interface Display
  • methods can be called to fill in attribute values
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