dojo.event.connect to it and in there do dojo.event.stopEvent (or
something like that) if you
dont want to go on with the submit

On Fri, Oct 24, 2008 at 10:22 PM, Norman Franke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks. I apparently forgot to look at contrib.
>
> As for the second question, I'd love to, but how can I update the formhidden
> section of the form such that my controls (that were created via AJAX) will
> be sent on the next AJAX action? If I don't update the entire form, I never
> get the values of the controls, it seems. Changing it from
> @Persist("client") to @Persist("session") seems to have solved it, however.
>
> Lastly, how can I get an ajax submit to abort? I want to have an onclick on
> a the submit that will put up "confirm('Are you sure?')" but no matter what,
> it submits anyway.
>
> Norman Franke
> Answering Service for Directors, Inc.
> www.myasd.com
>
> On Oct 24, 2008, at 2:36 PM, Andreas Andreou wrote:
>
>> To answer your initial question, just use contrib:ajaxStatus from
>>
>> http://tapestry.apache.org/tapestry4.1/tapestry-contrib/componentreference/ajaxstatus.html
>>
>> For the second, why not update only the part in question?
>>
>> On Fri, Oct 24, 2008 at 9:22 PM, Norman Franke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>>
>>> I sort of have it working by doing an "onclick" and relying on the entire
>>> form to update, which resets my div.
>>>
>>> But that brings up another point. I want to AJAX fetch a list of elements
>>> with a checkbox. Is there a better way to do this than by setting the
>>> entire
>>> form as one of the updateComponents? It pretty much forces an update of
>>> the
>>> entire page. If I don't, I can't get the values of the checkbox since
>>> tapestry serializes the state of the @For and checkboxes in fields.
>>>
>>> What's the best way to handle this?
>>>
>>> Norman Franke
>>> Answering Service for Directors, Inc.
>>> www.myasd.com
>>>
>>> On Oct 24, 2008, at 12:10 PM, Norman Franke wrote:
>>>
>>>> I've searched the documentation, and I can't find how one implements a
>>>> "loading..." indicator when an AJAX request is sent off. My app will be
>>>> doing a series of database queries which can take 10 seconds or so, and
>>>> it
>>>> really needs something to tell the user they need to wait a bit.
>>>> Showing/Hiding a div would be great.
>>>>
>>>> Norman Franke
>>>> Answering Service for Directors, Inc.
>>>> www.myasd.com
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
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>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
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>>>
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Andreas Andreou - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - http://blog.andyhot.gr
>> Tapestry / Tacos developer
>> Open Source / JEE Consulting
>>
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>>
>
>
>
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>



-- 
Andreas Andreou - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - http://blog.andyhot.gr
Tapestry / Tacos developer
Open Source / JEE Consulting

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