> I figured this had something to do with Trails (not many other folks
> use ComponentAddresses). Are you hivemindizing the editors
> registration piece? I wanted to do that long ago. In this case, you
> could probably just define your own "rule" in HiveMind to process the
> "editor" element into a ComponentAddress which can be added to your
> map. I would also put a unique="true" on the "key" attribute so that
> you don't get two editors defined by folks with the same name.
>
> On 10/23/07, Alejandro Scandroli <
alejandroscandroli@...> wrote:
> > Hi
> >
> > I made it work using a contribution point and a EditorContribution class:
> >
> > <configuration-point id="Editors" occurs="1..n">
> > <schema>
> > <element name="editor">
> > <attribute name="key"/>
> > <attribute name="container" required="true"/>
> > <attribute name="component" required="true"/>
> > <conversion class="org.amneris.trails.EditorContribution"/>
> > </element>
> > </schema>
> > </configuration-point>
> >
> > Then creating the ComponentAddress entry on initialization
> >
> > public void initialize()
> > {
> > for (EditorContribution editorContribution : contributions)
> > {
> > getEditorMap().put(editorContribution.getKey(), new
> > ComponentAddress(editorContribution.getContainer(),
> > editorContribution.getComponent()));
> > }
> > }
> >
> > Is there any way to create the ComponentAddress directly on HiveMind?
> > I still can't find how to use constructor parameters.
> >
> > Alejandro.
> >
> >
> > On 10/23/07, James Carman <
james@...> wrote:
> > > I would probably handle that via a configuration point in HiveMind.
> > >
> > > On 10/22/07, Alejandro Scandroli <
alejandroscandroli@...> wrote:
> > > > Hi James
> > > >
> > > > I'm trying to migrate some Spring code to Hivemind.
> > > > I need to create a Map<String , ComponentAddress> in the Hivemind registry.
> > > > This is what it looks like on spring:
> > > >
> > > > <bean id="viewerService" class="org.trails.descriptor.EditorBlockFinder">
> > > > <property name="defaultBlockAddress">
> > > > <bean class="org.apache.tapestry.util.ComponentAddress">
> > > > <constructor-arg index="0">
> > > > <value>trails:Viewers</value>
> > > > </constructor-arg>
> > > > <constructor-arg index="1">
> > > > <value>stringViewer</value>
> > > > </constructor-arg>
> > > > </bean>
> > > > </property>
> > > > <property name="editorMap">
> > > > <map>
> > > > <entry>
> > > > <key>
> > > > <value>hidden</value>
> > > > </key>
> > > > <bean class="org.apache.tapestry.util.ComponentAddress">
> > > > <constructor-arg index="0">
> > > > <value>trails:Viewers</value>
> > > > </constructor-arg>
> > > > <constructor-arg index="1">
> > > > <value>hidden</value>
> > > > </constructor-arg>
> > > > </bean>
> > > > </entry>
> > > > </map>
> > > > </property>
> > > > </bean>
> > > >
> > > > Alejandro.
> > > >
> > > > On 10/22/07, James Carman <
james@...> wrote:
> > > > > A ComponentAddress, in Tapestry, isn't really a "service", though.
> > > > > Why would you want to put this type of object in your HiveMind
> > > > > registry? I can see it being part of a configuration, but not
> > > > > necessarily a service. What exactly are you trying to do?
> > > > >
> > > > > On 10/22/07, Alejandro Scandroli <
alejandroscandroli@...> wrote:
> > > > > > Hi
> > > > > >
> > > > > > I need to do some constructor-based injection and I can't find the way.
> > > > > > I need to create an instance of
> > > > > > org.apache.tapestry.util.ComponentAddress, the constructor takes 2
> > > > > > Strings as parameters.
> > > > > > I know it should be simple but I'm lost.
> > > > > >
> > > > > > Alejandro.
> > > > > >
> > > > >
> > > >
> > >
> >
>