On Fri, May 2, 2008 at 6:36 PM, Joel Wiegman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Josh,
>
>  Thanks for the great suggestions.
>
>  I guess I'm still befuddled as to why a web framework would resist having a 
> "request scope" so dilligently.

It's not resistance, it's a different mindset, one that states that
URLs should stand on their own in the browser and represent data to be
presented to the user (i.e., render page requests) rather than
behaviors to execute (the action requests).

>From what you describe, your activate event handler method should be
able to load whatever additional data is needed and store it in simple
component fields: that's your request scope.  The fact that Tapestry
links action requests to page requests is a separate issue.

The goal is that if the user clicks the refresh button (the other
annoying thing users do, besides hit the browser back button) that
there won't be unexpected side-effects (such as, for instance,
re-submitting an order, re-sending an email, etc., etc.).

>
>  The "flash" scope appears to makes some intelligent guesses as to when you 
> want your objects removed from the session, but the back-button-example I 
> listed is one of quite a few reasons why making such guesses is a fools game. 
>  As we all know, HTTP is a request-response, stateless protocol, but Tapestry 
> appears to be resisting storing state in one of the most basic constructs 
> available in HTTP... the request.  Anyone know why this is?

Because we can store it inside ordinary fields instead?

>
>  As you illustrated, I'm sure there are quite a few elaborate ways of dancing 
> around the issue in any application (redundant checking, re-verification, 
> passing "clearThisValue" flags around, etc.).  None seem very elegant though 
> (and would probably be associated with "this is why I'm doing this" comments).
>
>  As for your activation context suggestions, those are some neat ideas.  I 
> hadn't considered your "marking" suggestion.   I'm a little afraid to use it 
> though.  I can see a Tapestry pattern evolving from that that yields 
> (String... stuff) as your parameter to your onActivate with a boatload of 
> extravagant logic.
>
>  Anyway, still haven't heard a useful suggestion to get objects into a 
> "request only" scope.  If anyone can think of something please post!

It would be interesting to see what some of these values are that can
only be set inside an action request but must then span into a render
request.

>
>  Thanks,
>
>  Joel
>
>
>
>
>  -----Original Message-----
>  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Josh Canfield
>  Sent: Fri 5/2/2008 6:31 PM
>  To: Tapestry users
>  Subject: Re: T5: Persistence pains
>
>  I generally consider flash persistence as a way to get an object from
>  the action request to the render request...
>
>  If you're going to set it in the render request you should consider
>  adding code that validates that your data and context match up. You
>  could, for instance, also flash persist your id and check it against
>  the id from the context. If they don't match then null your other
>  properties.
>
>  > While some may argue that this is "just poor design", what if the fields
>  > I initialize varies by product?  I'd get a "merging" of the two products
>  > on the screen depending on what was persisted first.
>
>  Storing these things in your component smells funny... but I don't
>  know your app. If someone is coming to the page for the first time you
>  want an empty object, if they are posting an update to the form then
>  Tapestry is going to populate the values. If you are navigating within
>  the page using pagelinks, but it's a form then I'd consider posting
>  the form instead...
>
>  Josh
>
>  On Fri, May 2, 2008 at 2:39 PM, Joel Wiegman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>  > Sure Howard.
>  >
>  > Quite simply, "the back button".  When loading a page with an activation
>  > context, say:
>  >
>  > http://myapp.com/editproduct/20  (where 20 is a product ID)
>  >
>  > I'll initialize some flash-persistable values on the page from the
>  > Product whose ID is 20.
>  >
>  > Now if the user clicks on the Back button and goes to a link that reuses
>  > the same screen but without a context, say:
>  >
>  > http://myapp.com/editproduct/ (let's say this page "should" blank out
>  > the screen so the user can enter a new product)
>  >
>  > Most of my flash-persistable values (from Product 20) will still be on
>  > the screen.
>  >
>  > While some may argue that this is "just poor design", what if the fields
>  > I initialize varies by product?  I'd get a "merging" of the two products
>  > on the screen depending on what was persisted first.
>  >
>  > Are these scenarios valid?
>  >
>  >
>  >
>  > -----Original Message-----
>  > From: Howard Lewis Ship [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  > Sent: Friday, May 02, 2008 5:17 PM
>  > To: Tapestry users
>  > Subject: Re: T5: Persistence pains
>  >
>  > Could you elaborate on why the "flash" persistence strategy is
>  > insufficient for your needs?
>  >
>  > On Fri, May 2, 2008 at 2:00 PM, Joel Wiegman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>  > wrote:
>  > > All,
>  > >
>  > >  Maybe I'm missing something here, maybe I'm not, but I'm attempting
>  > > to  preserve state JUST BETWEEN REQUESTS and I'm really struggling (I
>  > > know  in T5 there's <really> two requests, but for simplicity's sake
>  > > let's  just call the round trip from the browser a "request").
>  > >
>  > >  My options are:
>  > >
>  > >  1) @Persist("session")
>  > >  - Obviously doesn't work well for just persisting values between
>  > > requests, unless someone has come up with a reliable construct for
>  > > nulling out these values whenever someone leaves the page?
>  > >
>  > >  2) @Persist("flash")
>  > >  - This is really only useful for messages and other objects that are
>  >
>  > > reliably referenced once.  This is NOT "request-scoped persistence".
>  > >
>  > >  3) @Persist("client")
>  > >  - While I thought initially thought that this would solve all my
>  > > woes,  instead every link in my application now carries around an huge
>  >
>  > > encoded  state variable in the URL.  I'm completely missing the
>  > > benefit of this  versus just using session persistence (enlightenment
>  > appreciated).
>  > >
>  > >  4) Activation context magic
>  > >  - While this does make for clean and nifty URLs, the hassle of
>  > > constructing the identifiers for complex objects and creating the
>  > > contexts for them has not proven "worth it" to me (hint: composite
>  > > primary keys are almost unusable).  Also, if your page uses more than
>  >
>  > > one dynamically-sized collection of objects, then you're out of luck.
>  > >
>  > >  PLEASE PLEASE don't interpret this as Tapestry-bashing.  Tapestry has
>  >
>  > > been a delight to work with compared to previous frameworks I've used.
>  > >  I'm just really struggling with how to do something that, IMHO, a web
>  >
>  > > framework should make very simple (request-scoped persistence).
>  > >
>  > >  Anyone solve this riddle yet?
>  > >
>  > >  Joel
>  > >
>  > >
>  > >  ---------------------------------------------------------------------
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>  > >
>  > >
>  >
>  >
>  >
>  > --
>  > Howard M. Lewis Ship
>  >
>  > Creator Apache Tapestry and Apache HiveMind
>  >
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-- 
Howard M. Lewis Ship

Creator Apache Tapestry and Apache HiveMind

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