![]() ![]() In our application we’ll have an “Add Code to Mystic Paste” page, mock data might include some user created content in the textarea of the page. For instance in the application we intend to create during our Five Days of Wicket will be a pastebin application called “Mystic Paste”. The Designer creates the html for the website and fleshes it out with “mock” sections.The basic workflow involved in creating and maintaining html rendered by Wicket is as follows: ![]() This means that html pages can be loaded into Dreamweaver (or whatever tool the Designer is comfortable with) and they will look very close to the same as they would when rendered on the deployment web server. The beauty of Wicket is that it uses plain xhtml pages as it’s templating markup. Wicket is a Java web application framework which allows “Designers” (people good with Dreamweaver) and “Developers” (people good with Java and Databases) to collaborate on a project with minimal chances of stepping on each other’s toes or wearing each other’s hats. Each day this week will feature a new article with an in-depth look at the creation process behind setting up a Java project and implementing the frontend with Apache Wicket.
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