I've downloaded and tried out the prop: prefix extension from HLS. One thing I was *really* hoping for, compared to OGNL, is that it would ignore null pointers, at least on reads. I have report-type pages (read-only) where I can sometimes have thousands of rows with 10-15 columns. Each of those columns currently has bulky cover methods which do NPE protection in case a relationship is missing (the actual values almost always come from a dotted path: foo.bar.baz.status, and OGNL will blow up if "bar" is null). I was hoping the prop: extension would handle this, but it seems to work just like OGNL if it hits a null. If something doesn't exist, I'm pretty happy with just getting a null back and displaying nothing. I played with the code a bit and this seems to work if you edit PropertyAccessorBinding.java and change the getObject() method: public Object getObject() { return _accessor.readProperty(); } <http://www.len.ro/work/articles/tapestry-ajax-application-1/> to: public Object getObject() { try { return _accessor.readProperty(); } catch (NullPointerException exception) { // Ignore NPE on reads ... return null; } } A) Does this seem like a reasonable thing to do? B) If yes to A, could it maybe be included in the actual prop: package (would beat maintaining a separate branch). Thanks! /dev/mrg PS. I didn't alter setObject() ... I'd consider that an actual error if you were trying to set things through nulls.
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