WiQuery is a project to add jQuery and jQuery UI to Apache Wicket.
This branch follows the development of Apache Wicket.
WiQuery consists of 3 subprojects:
- core - the core library
- ui - Wicket components for JQuery UI components
- demo - examples
WiQuery requires the following:
- Java 17
- Servlet 6
- Wicket 10 or newer
Newer or older major releases of Wicket are not compatible with this version of WiQuery.
- You have to change the groupId of the dependency from
org.odlabs.wiquery
toorg.wicketstuff.wiquery
- You have to change the version of your wiquery dependency to the current version that is compatible with your Wicket version.
- You have to rename the imports for the WiQuery components because the Java package was renamed from
org.odlabs.wiquery
toorg.wicketstuff.wiquery
Below is a short description of the projects of WiQuery.
The core project does not contain much:
- some interfaces and classes which were used with Wicket before 6.0 and are now deprecated.
- a basic classes to create events, mostly for jQuery UI.
- a basic API to create javascript functions and options to be used in behaviors or events.
The jQuery javascript is not included in WiQuery but in Wicket. In order to use a specific version one can add the following code in their Application#init():
getJavaScriptLibrarySettings().setJQueryReference(...);
or alternatively you can register a resource replacement:
addResourceReplacement(JQueryResourceReference.get(), ...);
where ... is the instance of your resource reference.
Here is where the fun starts, this project contains components and behaviors for enriching your application with jQuery UI.
One can override the default theme with a custom theme (for example 'foo') by creating a package called org.odlabs.wiquery.themes.foo and adding the following code in their Application#init():
addResourceReplacement(WiQueryCoreThemeResourceReference.get(), new WiQueryCoreThemeResourceReference("foo"));