I want to start using JPA with Wicket, and the quickest way was to start with Qwicket, a project that already has done the heavy lifting. I wanted to be able to build and run my maven-managed application from eclipse. And lastly, I wanted to use MySQL. Qwicket does come with maven support, but it's managed from an ant script. I wanted native maven support. Here's what I did to change qwicket so it fits my requirements:
1.1. Docbook and maven
I was looking for a maven plugin that produces documentation with syntax highlighting from docbook .
1.2. For the impatient
This article has been written in docbook , and generated via maven with the docbkx maven plugin .
You can check it out
*
as multi pages html
*
as a single html page
*
in PDF
You can download a ready-to-build maven project here http://www.springfuse.com/blog/docbook/docbook-1.0.0-src.zip . It is ready to be customized for your needs.
This article show you how you can fix bugs for maven-plugins (eclipse setup for hacking the code, debugging etc.) with a concrete project: maven-eclipse-plugin. Lets start …
This page will try to explain one particular process that can be used to version your projects, as a developer. While the process covered here will use one example of how to accomplish effective versioning, the concepts can be used anywhere.