Re: [Hypercontent-users] JSTL import
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alexvigdor
From: Alex V. <al...@bi...> - 2007-09-05 14:08:40
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Hi, For the portlet, I wrote a special wrapper stage that uses regular expressions to strip certain elements and rewrite links. This is why I suggested you consider using regular expressions within your JSP. Another possibility is you can define a "css" resource-directory with publish="false"; you can reference it as a CSS import with a relative path, so it will render while you're in HC, but won't find the CSS once published. It is not possible at this time to publish something that is different from what you preview; the portlet for example doesn't use static publishing at all, it uses a special modal template to dynamically rewrite content on demand. As for publishing extra outputs, I'm not sure why you would prefer a different approach - this is one of the core strengths of HC, and we're only talking about a few extra KB per file. Unless the pages are very expensive to render, it also should not have a significant impact on publishing performance. Alex On Sep 4, 2007, at 9:49 PM, tom tom wrote: > Hi Alex, > > I do not want to publish/process contents > unnecessarily, I would like to create a seperate > project for this, it makes sense as well because it is > only for business text. > > But let me know the following > > Is your xsls written for portlet samples strip off the > contents, > > How can we have the styles incooperated within the HC > so that while editing they can see the effect. > Where should I incooperate my Styles within HC. > Currently I did put my styles in the common.xsl, but > currently I did not want to strip off those while > publising or building. > > > Thanks, > > > --- Alex Vigdor <al...@bi...> wrote: > >> Hi, >> I see two approaches - using HC you could set up a >> separate output >> with just the markup you want; put the one with >> styles first so it >> will be the default preview output, but import the >> stripped down >> markup output into the JSTL. If you set up your xsl >> templates >> appropriately you can reuse as much of the body >> formatting you want >> to retain for the import. The only side effect is >> that both versions >> would be published, though you only need one. The >> alternative would >> be to use another taglib to transform the output >> within the JSP, e.g. >> >> > http://jakarta.apache.org/taglibs/doc/regexp-doc/intro.html >> >> Alex >> >> On Sep 4, 2007, at 2:42 AM, tom tom wrote: >> >>> Hi, >>> >>> We finish one lot of work, which is static text, >> we >>> had a staging area and used uPortal CWebProxy, it >>> worked perfectly. >>> >>> >>> We got some business text within our jsp pages, we >>> want to take those out and consider as jstl >> c:import, >>> so that business users can edit similar to the >> static >>> file approach we did. This also should get >> published >>> to a staging area. >>> >>> In the previous approach we had the CSS styles in >> the >>> published contents but with no issue, reason is >>> CWebProxy filter those out without any problem. >>> >>> for JSTL import, how can we see the effect of >> styles >>> within HC and take those out (infact require the >>> contents of the body tag). Is there any already >>> written xsl which serves this purpose, The key >> thing >>> is users should be able to see the effect of >> styles >>> within the HC and moment we build or publish it >> should >>> take off the styles from the tranformed content >> and >>> should publish to a staging area. >>> >>> >>> >>> Thanks >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >> > ______________________________________________________________________ >> >>> ______________ >>> Shape Yahoo! in your own image. Join our Network >> Research Panel >>> today! >> > http://surveylink.yahoo.com/gmrs/yahoo_panel_invite.asp?a=7 >>> >>> >> >> >> > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > --- >> This SF.net email is sponsored by: Splunk Inc. >> Still grepping through log files to find problems? >> Stop. >> Now Search log events and configuration files using >> AJAX and a browser. >> Download your FREE copy of Splunk now >> >> http://get.splunk.com/ >> _______________________________________________ >> Hypercontent-users mailing list >> Hyp...@li... >> > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/hypercontent-users >> > > > > > ______________________________________________________________________ > ______________ > Shape Yahoo! in your own image. Join our Network Research Panel > today! http://surveylink.yahoo.com/gmrs/yahoo_panel_invite.asp?a=7 > > |