Or if you are very brave, and using java 6, you can use jasper to
compile the jsp to java, then use the java api compile to compile to a
class file, load it and then execute it, but yeah FreeMarker would be
easier :)

musachy

On Thu, Jul 9, 2009 at 1:06 PM, Dale Newfield<d...@newfield.org> wrote:
> stanlick wrote:
>>
>> However, for a plug-in to be a drop-n-go deal, I sort of think the goods
>> should all be in the plug-in jar itself?  Make sense?
>
> Agreed, but I believe I've been told that can't be done with jsp templates.
>  This is why plugins that I've seen have been implemented in freemarker.
>
>> I was looking at this
>> article, and it appears this cat has a JSP working in his plug-in?
>>
>> http://www.struts2.org/category/struts2-plugins/
>
> I downloaded that zip, and looked inside the .jars:  no .jsps.
>
>> The reason for this plug-in is to eliminate a couple pages of
>> configuration
>> steps for the adopter of my application.  I'd rather not say just drop the
>> plug-in in your WEB-INF/lib folder and then copy JSP files here...
>
> I'm simply reporting hear-say here, but I believe you've already hit the
> roadblock that'll prevent you from getting farther w/o using a different
> template engine.
>
> -Dale
>
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-- 
"Hey you! Would you help me to carry the stone?" Pink Floyd

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