It's really simple to make a validation tracker!. I'd just make your own
one to do what you want. Will take you less than 5 minutes I'm sure!
But yes the tapestry auto tracking thing is a pain in the bum sometimes,
I've always struggled with it being too smart and not being able to turn
it off
Also regarding NAT. I generally try and use NAT reflection too when I do
port mapping, so internal users still go through the port mapping on the
router. It helps simplify things a bit. Only problem is to your app it
appears that all the request come from the Router IP.
Another option is to us
I haven't used the later versions of tapestry (I'm still back on 5.1 or
5.2 or something).
By I replaced the BaseURLSource with my own version.
Just Note: This might not be what you want. It uses the requested port
to determine what port to use on generating links.
Something like this:
packag
On 28/05/2013 8:44 PM, Thiago H de Paula Figueiredo wrote:
On Tue, 28 May 2013 09:11:56 -0300, Ryan How wrote:
Yes, but the bytecode enhancement that tapestry does, it wouldn't be
able to be understood by the Dalvik JVM? As is my understanding. I
just don't want to spend a l
On 28/05/2013 7:48 PM, Thiago H de Paula Figueiredo wrote:
On Tue, 28 May 2013 00:39:22 -0300, Chris Cureau
wrote:
Tapestry itself runs on a web container, like tomcat. The served
pages will operate in chrome in android and probably firefox as well,
though I haven't tested it there.
You're
On 28/05/2013 7:49 PM, Thiago H de Paula Figueiredo wrote:
On Tue, 28 May 2013 00:44:02 -0300, Ryan How wrote:
Sorry, just to clarify a bit I mean hosting it on Android. There is a
port of Jetty for Android, so will it run in that, but does Tapestry
require some libs that aren't on an
Thanks for all the help.
I'm going to investigate the linux route, failing that then might have
to try pre-generating the tapestry enhanced classes.
I didn't actually consider linux on an arm device, but it would work
quite nicely. And I'm guessing I should be able to run linux on pretty
muc
lets just say id save about $20,000 worth of redevelopment to be able to run it
on android :)
Well you can run linux on an arm tablet, I wonder if there is a jvm for arm
linux?
Original Message
From: Muhammad Gelbana
Sent: Tue, 28/05/2013 06:21 PM
To: Tapestry users
CC
That's true. I didn't think of that.
I'm running tapestry 5.1 for this particular app (I'm wanting to port an
app over to android), I think it uses something else for byte code
manipulation, but it is still byte code and hence not dalvik compatible :(
And byte code manipulation is pretty core
Thanks. I will try it, just doing some preliminary investigation before
investing some time. I haven't done any android development before, so I
only know the basic theory.
Thanks, Ryan
On 28/05/2013 11:53 AM, Kalle Korhonen wrote:
On Mon, May 27, 2013 at 8:44 PM, Ryan How wrote:
omcat. The served pages will
operate in chrome in android and probably firefox as well, though I haven't
tested it there.
You can also use jQuery mobile for added capabilities, but a dedicated
project like tapestry-jQuery doesn't exist yet as far as I know.
On May 27, 2013 10:25 PM, &q
Hi,
I was just wondering before I look too closely if anyone knows if a
Tapestry webapp can run on Android?
I see there is an Android port of Jetty.
Thanks, Ryan
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