<div class="button-bar"> <a class="button" href="#courses"><i class="fa fa-graduation-cap"></i><br>Online courses</a> <div class="button"></div> <a class="button" href="#examples"><i class="fa fa-life-ring"></i><br>Support & Examples</a> </div> </div>
Every release is announced through our mailing lists and the official Apache announcements list. We also publish a news item on our website with the announcement, and it is also published in our RSS feed (handy for RSS readers).
Here are the most recent headlines:
{% for post in site.posts limit:3 %}
The complete articles and all other news items are available in the [archives]({{ site.baseurl }}/news).
Learn building web applications with Wicket from scratch reading its 200+ page user guide. The guide gradually introduces you to the various features of the framework with many real-world examples. It covers subjects such as models, behaviours, testing and integration with other projects.
The guide is available as PDF or html file for the following versions:
You can use the guide for older releases even though there will be differences. We urge you however to upgrade your project to the latest stable release rather than sticking on an older version.
Each release of Wicket comes with sources, including JavaDocs. When you use Maven for dependency management, your IDE will automatically download the source JARs and when you hover on a Wicket class or method, show you the corresponding documentation.
For reference we also publish the API documentation online so you can link to it from emails or websites:
When you upgrade your application from an older Wicket version to a newer version you can run into all of the changes that were applied to Wicket's API. We have done our best to document all the changes and provide migration paths between the different Wicket versions.
Here's a list of the migration guides:
If you encounter a change that was not in the migration guide, don't hesitate to notify us.
Stuck with a problem? See how you can find [support]({{ site.baseurl }}/help/index.html)!
Wicket is well supported by the three main Java IDEs (NetBeans, IntelliJ and Eclipse). Find [here]({{ site.baseurl }}/contribute/ides.html) how to work with Wicket projects with your favourite IDE.
New to Wicket and eager to learn it? This [presentation]({{ site.baseurl }}/learn/presentations/wicketIntroduction.pdf) is for you!