You are viewing a plain text version of this content. The canonical link for it is here.
Posted to dev@struts.apache.org by Apache Wiki <wi...@apache.org> on 2006/02/08 23:16:05 UTC
[Struts Wiki] Trivial Update of "StrutsInitialization" by GeorgeDinwiddie
Dear Wiki user,
You have subscribed to a wiki page or wiki category on "Struts Wiki" for change notification.
The following page has been changed by GeorgeDinwiddie:
http://wiki.apache.org/struts/StrutsInitialization
The comment on the change is:
escape class names
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
from whereever can be stored in application state for use by the rest of your
application.
- Your plug-in class should extend org.apache.struts.action.PlugIn. Once you
+ Your plug-in class should extend `org.apache.struts.action.PlugIn`. Once you
- finish implementing the PlugIn interface, you would create an entry in your
+ finish implementing the !PlugIn interface, you would create an entry in your
- strut-config.xml to reference the PlugIn that you just created.
+ strut-config.xml to reference the !PlugIn that you just created.
You can find more information about it here:
http://jakarta.apache.org/struts/userGuide/configuration.html#plugin_config
- You also might want to look at the JavaDocs for the PlugIn interface and read
+ You also might want to look at the !JavaDocs for the !PlugIn interface and read
- up on that as well. }}}
+ up on that as well.
----
= Define statics =
Define statics (maybe even private with access methods) in your extended servlet.
@@ -85, +85 @@
<listener-class>my.app.MyContextListener</listener-class>
</listener>
}}}
- Then, MyContextListener.java might be:
+ Then, !MyContextListener.java might be:
{{{
package my.app;
import javax.servlet.ServletContextEvent;
@@ -102, +102 @@
}
}
}}}
- Then, in your code you can call MyContextListener.getValue("someKey"); to retrieve the value. Naturally, you probably want to do something more complex than this like reading from a config file and creating some "real" configuration holder object, but you get the point :)
+ Then, in your code you can call `MyContextListener.getValue("someKey");` to retrieve the value. Naturally, you probably want to do something more complex than this like reading from a config file and creating some "real" configuration holder object, but you get the point :)
Remember, you can do whatever you want here... it can be as simple or as complex as you like!
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscribe@struts.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: dev-help@struts.apache.org