I\'ve run through the Google Web Toolkit StockWatcher Tutorial using Eclipse and the Google Plugin, and I\'m attempting to make some basic changes to it so I can better unde
There is a far more simple and easy solution for that. If you want to send an object of your custom designed class from server side to client side you should define this custom class in shared package.
For example for your case the you just have to carry the Stock.java class (by drag and drop) into
com.google.gwt.sample.stockwatcher.shared
package. However from your package hierarchy screenshot it seems that you had deleted this shared package. Just re-create this package and drop the Stock.java inside it and let the game begin.
I was getting the same issue and the "mvn gwt:compile" output was not very helpful. Instead, when I tried deploying to tomcat (via the maven tomcat plugin: mvn tomcat:deploy) I got helpful error messages.
A few things I had to fix up:
GWT needs the .java file in addition to the .class file. Additionally, Stock needs to be in the "client" location of a GWT module.
The GWT compiler doesn't know about Stock, because it's not in a location it looks in. You can either move it to the client folder, or if it makes more sense leave it where it is and create a ModuleName.gwt.xml that references any other classes you want, and get your Main.gwt.xml file to inherit from that.
eg: DomainGwt.gwt.xml
<module>
<inherits name='com.google.gwt.user.User'/>
<source path="javapackagesabovethispackagegohere"/>
</module>
and:
<module rename-to="gwt_ui">
<inherits name="com.google.gwt.user.User"/>
<inherits name="au.com.groundhog.groundpics.DomainGwt"/>
<entry-point class="au.com.groundhog.groundpics.gwt.client.GPicsUIEntryPoint"/>
</module>
There's a better answer here: GWT Simple RPC use case problem : Code included
Basically, you can add parameters to your APPNAME.gwt.xml file so the compiler to give the compiler a path to the server-side class.
After much trial and error, I managed to find a way to do this. It might not be the best way, but it works. Hopefully this post can save someone else a lot of time and effort.
These instructions assume that you have completed both the basic StockWatcher tutorial and the Google App Engine StockWatcher modifications.
There are a couple of things to keep in mind about GWT:
Due to both items above, the client can never implement the Stock class that we created in com.google.gwt.sample.stockwatcher.server. Instead, we'll create a new client-side Stock class called StockClient.
package com.google.gwt.sample.stockwatcher.client;
import java.io.Serializable;
import java.util.Date;
public class StockClient implements Serializable {
private Long id;
private String symbol;
private Date createDate;
public StockClient() {
this.createDate = new Date();
}
public StockClient(String symbol) {
this.symbol = symbol;
this.createDate = new Date();
}
public StockClient(Long id, String symbol, Date createDate) {
this();
this.id = id;
this.symbol = symbol;
this.createDate = createDate;
}
public Long getId() {
return this.id;
}
public String getSymbol() {
return this.symbol;
}
public Date getCreateDate() {
return this.createDate;
}
public void setId(Long id) {
this.id = id;
}
public void setSymbol(String symbol) {
this.symbol = symbol;
}
}
Now we make some simple modifications to the client classes so that they know that the RPC call returns StockClient[] instead of String[].
package com.google.gwt.sample.stockwatcher.client;
import com.google.gwt.sample.stockwatcher.client.NotLoggedInException;
import com.google.gwt.user.client.rpc.RemoteService;
import com.google.gwt.user.client.rpc.RemoteServiceRelativePath;
@RemoteServiceRelativePath("stock")
public interface StockService extends RemoteService {
public Long addStock(String symbol) throws NotLoggedInException;
public void removeStock(String symbol) throws NotLoggedInException;
public StockClient[] getStocks() throws NotLoggedInException;
}
package com.google.gwt.sample.stockwatcher.client;
import com.google.gwt.sample.stockwatcher.client.StockClient;
import com.google.gwt.user.client.rpc.AsyncCallback;
public interface StockServiceAsync {
public void addStock(String symbol, AsyncCallback<Long> async);
public void removeStock(String symbol, AsyncCallback<Void> async);
public void getStocks(AsyncCallback<StockClient[]> async);
}
Add one import:
import com.google.gwt.sample.stockwatcher.client.StockClient;
All other code stays the same, except addStock, loadStocks, and displayStocks:
private void loadStocks() {
stockService = GWT.create(StockService.class);
stockService.getStocks(new AsyncCallback<String[]>() {
public void onFailure(Throwable error) {
handleError(error);
}
public void onSuccess(String[] symbols) {
displayStocks(symbols);
}
});
}
private void displayStocks(String[] symbols) {
for (String symbol : symbols) {
displayStock(symbol);
}
}
private void addStock() {
final String symbol = newSymbolTextBox.getText().toUpperCase().trim();
newSymbolTextBox.setFocus(true);
// Stock code must be between 1 and 10 chars that are numbers, letters,
// or dots.
if (!symbol.matches("^[0-9a-zA-Z\\.]{1,10}$")) {
Window.alert("'" + symbol + "' is not a valid symbol.");
newSymbolTextBox.selectAll();
return;
}
newSymbolTextBox.setText("");
// Don't add the stock if it's already in the table.
if (stocks.contains(symbol))
return;
addStock(new StockClient(symbol));
}
private void addStock(final StockClient stock) {
stockService.addStock(stock.getSymbol(), new AsyncCallback<Long>() {
public void onFailure(Throwable error) {
handleError(error);
}
public void onSuccess(Long id) {
stock.setId(id);
displayStock(stock.getSymbol());
}
});
}
Finally, we modify the getStocks method of the StockServiceImpl class so that it translates the server-side Stock classes into client-side StockClient classes before returning the array.
import com.google.gwt.sample.stockwatcher.client.StockClient;
We need to change the addStock method slightly so that the generated ID is returned:
public Long addStock(String symbol) throws NotLoggedInException {
Stock stock = new Stock(getUser(), symbol);
checkLoggedIn();
PersistenceManager pm = getPersistenceManager();
try {
pm.makePersistent(stock);
} finally {
pm.close();
}
return stock.getId();
}
All other methods stay the same, except getStocks:
public StockClient[] getStocks() throws NotLoggedInException {
checkLoggedIn();
PersistenceManager pm = getPersistenceManager();
List<StockClient> stockclients = new ArrayList<StockClient>();
try {
Query q = pm.newQuery(Stock.class, "user == u");
q.declareParameters("com.google.appengine.api.users.User u");
q.setOrdering("createDate");
List<Stock> stocks = (List<Stock>) q.execute(getUser());
for (Stock stock : stocks)
{
stockclients.add(new StockClient(stock.getId(), stock.getSymbol(), stock.getCreateDate()));
}
} finally {
pm.close();
}
return (StockClient[]) stockclients.toArray(new StockClient[0]);
}
The code above works perfectly for me when deployed to Google App Engine, but triggers an error in Google Web Toolkit Hosted Mode:
SEVERE: [1244408678890000] javax.servlet.ServletContext log: Exception while dispatching incoming RPC call
com.google.gwt.user.server.rpc.UnexpectedException: Service method 'public abstract com.google.gwt.sample.stockwatcher.client.StockClient[] com.google.gwt.sample.stockwatcher.client.StockService.getStocks() throws com.google.gwt.sample.stockwatcher.client.NotLoggedInException' threw an unexpected exception: java.lang.NullPointerException: Name is null
Let me know if you encounter the same problem or not. The fact that it works in Google App Engine seems to indicate a bug in Hosted Mode.