e Newton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Heh. Hrmph. Works under Safari/OSX.
>>
>> Gives me the heebie jeebies.
>>
>>
>> --- On Tue, 12/9/08, Frank W. Zammetti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>> From: Frank W. Zammetti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>&g
Re: Displaying "Please Wait" message
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To: user@struts.apache.org
> Date: Tue, 9 Dec 2008 18:34:13 -0500
>
> One thing I have done in the past is to replace the submit button with
> an animated gif that resembles a status bar. This keeps users
On Tue, Dec 9, 2008 at 18:25, Dave Newton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Heh. Hrmph. Works under Safari/OSX.
>
> Gives me the heebie jeebies.
>
>
> --- On Tue, 12/9/08, Frank W. Zammetti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> From: Frank W. Zammetti <[EMAIL PRO
Heh. Hrmph. Works under Safari/OSX.
Gives me the heebie jeebies.
--- On Tue, 12/9/08, Frank W. Zammetti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> From: Frank W. Zammetti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: [OT] Re: Displaying "Please Wait" message
> To: "Struts Users Mail
That's exactly the behavior I expected... odd that I didn't see it (IE7
and FF3.0.4 on XP). I can buy it's browser-dependent, just odd to hear
that FF3 would be different on OSX than on Windows. Oh well, that's
just *MORE* support for the idea of not using document.write() after the
page has
--- On Tue, 12/9/08, Frank W. Zammetti wrote:
> [...] I actually expected the alert() to NOT work because
> I figured the document.write() call was overwriting your
> page, which would have made sense, but it appears
> document.write() actually appends to the document.
> I wouldn't swear to th
RudyG wrote:
function splashScreen()
{
document.write("Processing Data.Please
Wait.");
document.forms[0].submit();
return true;
}
Put an alert("test"); in place of your submit() line there... does the
alert show up? I just tried in both FF and IE and in both cases i
Hi EasyStrutser.
Your option 2 is my fallback option. Also thanks to Wes who chimed in with
the same suggestion. However, your option 3 sounds a little more
interesting. Any chance you might have a link to some place that expands on
that?
Would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks.
Rudy
EasyStrutse
Hello Dave. I understand why you feel this may not be a Struts issue.
However, the form I'm using in this JSP is a Struts form not an HTML form.
As for Google search results I have gone through half of the trillion search
results you are referring to and have not found a solution, yet. If you hav
One thing I have done in the past is to replace the submit button with
an animated gif that resembles a status bar. This keeps users from
double posting the form, and gives a bit of visual feedback to indicate
to the user that he/she should wait.
If you want something more, you should take a look
RudyG wrote:
>
> Hello.
>
> I have an odd problem that I can't seem to resolve. I use struts along
> with JSP to call Java Servlets on the back end. Some back end calls take a
> little while when used by the WEB users so I've been asked to put up a
> message that tells the users to "Please Wait
--- On Tue, 12/9/08, RudyG wrote:
> I have an odd problem that I can't seem to resolve.
Not really a Struts issue, though.
> function splashScreen() {
> document.write("...");
> document.forms[0].submit();
> return true;
> }
>
> However the problem is that after the document wr
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