Hi Chris,

Thanks for the response.  I'm really a beginner with ajax/Dojo/Dom tree, and I 
have no idea how the tree could be returned from the server.  Would you have an 
example resource that you could point me to that would show this?  Or would you 
be able to send me some code snippets if the process isn't a long and 
complicated one.

Thanks,
Session


> You can use the Rhino JavaScript interpreter to execute JavaScript from
> Java, but I don't think that's actually what you are looking for.
> 
> It sounds like you are asking "How to I run some JavaScript in the 
> client's browser when something changes on the server?"  And the short 
> answer is, you can't.  At least not directly.
> 
> Remember, the web uses a Request/Response model where the Browser makes a
> request and the server returns a response, so there is no simple way for
> the server to initiate something happening in the browser.
> 
> Two options I can see are:
> 
> 1. Have the browser make an AJAX request and the server can return the new
> DOM tree without the removed node
> 
> 2. Have the browser resubmit the request and the new page can be built 
> without the removed node.
> 
> (*Chris*)
> 
> On 9/6/07, Session A Mwamufiya <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Hi,
>> 
>> Does anyone have an example of how to call a javascript function from a
>> java class?  I want to call a javascript function that removes a node
>> from a tree after a java class removed it from the database.
>> 
>> Thanks, Session
>> 
>> 
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