Using Magritte objects in pier
stéphane ducasse
ducasse at iam.unibe.ch
Wed Feb 25 11:51:34 MET 2009
If you can report what you found difficult it would be great.
because pier should improve on that level
Stef
On Feb 25, 2009, at 11:33 AM, Norbert Hartl wrote:
> On Wed, 2009-02-25 at 10:07 +0100, Lukas Renggli wrote:
>>> - How do I embedded any magritte object on a page? In my
>>> code I just do anObject asComponent. Is there an easy
>>> way to just integrate objects on a page. It needs some
>>> tricks in order not to display all the time the same
>>> object. I think yo know what I mean
>>
>> You can embed any Seaside component into Pier. In the case of a
>> Magritte component you might need to wrap it into a normal Seaside
>> component that returns true for #canBeRoot and that sets-up the
>> Magritte component.
>>
>> Simply create an embedded link in the page like so: +magritte-form+.
>> Click on the link to add a component and select your component from
>> the list.
>>
> Ok, thanks, I expected that. It is not big of a problem. With an
> additional component I can set up the announcements as well. It just
> makes the following approach a little more complicated.
>
>>> - If there is a good solution for the above is there a
>>> solution for displaying individual slots of an object?
>>> I mean to have access to an individual component class
>>> for an instance variable. The most difficult thing
>>> (while developing the project) was to layout the
>>> magritte forms. I would like to see something like
>>> +mySuperObject/@title+
>>> +mySuperObject/@text+
>>> to display the component classes of the object and
>>> dealing with the rest of the html the pier way.
>>
>> Mhh ... links support parameters, but that use-case is currently not
>> implemented. Maybe you want to give a try and implement that
>> yourself?
>>
> Yes, I'll give it a try. I need to know pier anyway if I want to use
> it. It is just that I had a very hard time to resolve even simple
> things in pier. I can accept the "structure is everything" thingy but
> most of this is than "the structure in your brain" and that is hard to
> follow. I scan again the papers I collected about magritte and pier
> over
> the years. At the moment it is an infinite learning curve (the
> structure
> seems to be a graph :) ).
>
> thanks so far,
>
> Norbert
>
>
>
>
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