Last modified by Lachlan Scott on 2007/07/12 19:54

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Lachlan Scott 7.1 1 **Problem:** you want to add an image to the HTML page of a Component; being an highly skilled application developer with the good sense to apply your talents with WebObjects , you expect to do this by using the <img src=" "> tag in the HTML, and are confused as to how to achieve it in WebObjects.
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Lachlan Scott 7.1 3 **Discussion:** WebObjects provides the WOImage tag to manage images in component pages which obviates the 'img' tag, and which can be somewhat unintuitive for the beginning WO developer. The tag supports all the expected HTML img attributes [WOL:as far as I can tell; needs checking] and the 'filename' attribute which references the location of the image to WebObjects. The images themselves must
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Lachlan Scott 7.1 5 **Question:** Yeah, but why can't I just make a static reference in the usual way? Well actually, you can [WOL:link required], but you don't really want to [explanation required: load balancing, web server resources, etc]. The WOImage solution is elegant, and it will provide
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Lachlan Scott 3.1 7 **Solution:**
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Lachlan Scott 3.1 9 1. Create a suitable image directory structure in your project
Lachlan Scott 7.1 10 1. In  the filesystem, add the image into your chosen directory
Lachlan Scott 6.1 11 1. Include the folders and image file as WebServerResources
12 1. Add a WOImage tag to your page and reference the image in the .wod mapping using the 'filename' attribute
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16 1. Create a suitable image directory structure in your project
Lachlan Scott 7.1 17 11. In Eclipse Package Explorer, right-click the project and select  New > Folder (image pending) and name the folder something appropriate such as 'images'
Lachlan Scott 6.1 18 11. Choose the parent folder, which is the project you're working in (image pending)
19 11. Proceed in this way, building the directory structure you want
Lachlan Scott 7.1 20 1. In  the filesystem, add the image into your chosen directory
21 11. [WOL:this seems clunky and there may be a better way of doing it from Eclipse directly]
Lachlan Scott 6.1 22 11. Eclipse updates the view showing your added image file
23 1. Include the folders and image file as WebServerResources
Lachlan Scott 7.1 24 11. In the Package Explorer, right-click the top folder, and select WOLips Tools > Include as WebServerResource [WOL:image pending]
Lachlan Scott 6.1 25 11. Notice that your folder structure has been added to the build directory
26 1. Add a WOImage tag to your page and reference the image in the .wod mapping using the 'filename' attribute
27 11. In the WOLips perspective, open the component to which you wish to add your image, and double-click the .wod file eg. Main.wod; it should open the .HTML and .wod files in WOLips Builder view
28 11. Use the WOLips button at the top of the screen to insert a WOImage tag in the .html file and a binding in the .wod file (image pending)
29 11. Name the WebObject something appropriate (image pending)
Lachlan Scott 7.1 30 11. Use code completion (cntrl-space) in the .wod file to display the usual <IMG> attributes (image pending), select  filename
31 11. Complete  the filename attribute to match the path to your image, leaving out the leading '/'; in our example, that is
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Lachlan Scott 6.1 33 LoginBackground : WOImage {
Lachlan Scott 7.1 34 filename = "images/backgrounds/loginBackground.gif";
35 }
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37 1.
Lachlan Scott 7.1 38 11. Run your application, with any luck, it should All Just Work™ (image pending)
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