I am trying to allocate id from backing bean to div element using below code:
<c:forEach var="item" items="#{backingBean.dataModel}">
<t:div id="xyz_#{item.id}" forceId="true" forceIdIndex="false" title="#{item.name}" style="display:none">
<ui:include src="#{item.view}">
<ui:param name="id" value="#{item.id}" />
<ui:param name="model" value="#{item.model}" />
</ui:include>
</t:div>
</c:forEach>
When page is getting loaded for the first time, it assigns correct id as inferred from backing bean. When I refresh the section of page with this code, it do not call getId method of backing bean but calls getView, getModel correctly. As a result, div has incorrect Id.
It might the case that div id is allocated prior to c:forEach execution. How do I enforce div to use Id from backing bean when it is inside c:forEach?
The id (and binding) attributes of JSF UI components are evaluated during view build time (when the JSF component tree is built for the first time), not during view render time nor during future reuse of the very same JSF component tree in subsequent postbacks to the same view.
I'm not exactly sure why you're approaching it with a <t:div> like that. It would make more sense to use a plain HTML <div> in this particular case.
<c:forEach var="item" items="#{backingBean.dataModel}">
<div id="xyz_#{item.id}" title="#{item.name}" style="display:none">
<ui:include src="#{item.view}">
<ui:param name="id" value="#{item.id}" />
<ui:param name="model" value="#{item.model}" />
</ui:include>
</div>
</c:forEach>
See also:
JSTL in JSF2 Facelets... makes sense?
Related
I have following code:
<ui:repeat var="class2" value="#{bean.list}" varStatus="status">
<h:form id="#{class2.name}">
<h:outputText value="#{class2.name}" />
</h:form>
</ui:repeat>
However, when I open the page, it errors as follows:
component identifier must not be a zero-length String
But it is properly printed in the <h:outputText>. How is this caused and how can I solve it?
You can use EL in the id attribute of a JSF component, but the EL variable has to be available during view build time, while the JSF component tree is to be built. However, the <ui:repeat> runs during view render time, while the HTML output is to be generated based on JSF component tree. The <ui:repeat var> is not available during view build time and #{class2.name} evaluates to null which totally explains the error you got. That it works in <h:outputText> is because it runs during view render time.
If you replace <ui:repeat> by <c:forEach>, which runs during view build time, then it'll work as you intented. The <c:forEach> will namely generate physically multiple <h:form> components in the JSF component tree which each generate individually their own HTML output (in contrary to <ui:repeat>, wherein the very same <h:form> component is been reused multiple times to generate HTML output).
<c:forEach var="class2" items="#{bean.list}" varStatus="status">
<h:form id="#{class2.name}">
<h:outputText value="#{class2.name}" />
</h:form>
</c:forEach>
However, I really wonder why you need to do that. There's usually no need to dynamically assign component IDs. JSF will already ensure the uniqueness of the ID. The below example,
<ui:repeat var="class2" value="#{bean.list}" varStatus="status">
<h:form id="form">
<h:outputText value="#{class2.name}" />
</h:form>
</ui:repeat>
will end up in multiple forms with each an unique ID, suffixed with iteration index of the <ui:repeat>. If you actually need to use #{class2.name} for some JavaScript/jQuery purposes (you did nowhere state the concrete functional requirement in the question for which you thought that this would be the right solution, so it's merely guessing), then just wrap it in a plain vanilla HTML element:
<ui:repeat var="class2" value="#{bean.list}" varStatus="status">
<div id="#{class2.name}">
<h:form id="form">
<h:outputText value="#{class2.name}" />
</h:form>
</div>
</ui:repeat>
Or set it as style class of a JSF component, which is also just selectable via a CSS selector:
<ui:repeat var="class2" value="#{bean.list}" varStatus="status">
<h:form id="form" styleClass="#{class2.name}">
<h:outputText value="#{class2.name}" />
</h:form>
</ui:repeat>
See also:
JSTL in JSF2 Facelets... makes sense?
I have following code:
<ui:repeat var="class2" value="#{bean.list}" varStatus="status">
<h:form id="#{class2.name}">
<h:outputText value="#{class2.name}" />
</h:form>
</ui:repeat>
However, when I open the page, it errors as follows:
component identifier must not be a zero-length String
But it is properly printed in the <h:outputText>. How is this caused and how can I solve it?
You can use EL in the id attribute of a JSF component, but the EL variable has to be available during view build time, while the JSF component tree is to be built. However, the <ui:repeat> runs during view render time, while the HTML output is to be generated based on JSF component tree. The <ui:repeat var> is not available during view build time and #{class2.name} evaluates to null which totally explains the error you got. That it works in <h:outputText> is because it runs during view render time.
If you replace <ui:repeat> by <c:forEach>, which runs during view build time, then it'll work as you intented. The <c:forEach> will namely generate physically multiple <h:form> components in the JSF component tree which each generate individually their own HTML output (in contrary to <ui:repeat>, wherein the very same <h:form> component is been reused multiple times to generate HTML output).
<c:forEach var="class2" items="#{bean.list}" varStatus="status">
<h:form id="#{class2.name}">
<h:outputText value="#{class2.name}" />
</h:form>
</c:forEach>
However, I really wonder why you need to do that. There's usually no need to dynamically assign component IDs. JSF will already ensure the uniqueness of the ID. The below example,
<ui:repeat var="class2" value="#{bean.list}" varStatus="status">
<h:form id="form">
<h:outputText value="#{class2.name}" />
</h:form>
</ui:repeat>
will end up in multiple forms with each an unique ID, suffixed with iteration index of the <ui:repeat>. If you actually need to use #{class2.name} for some JavaScript/jQuery purposes (you did nowhere state the concrete functional requirement in the question for which you thought that this would be the right solution, so it's merely guessing), then just wrap it in a plain vanilla HTML element:
<ui:repeat var="class2" value="#{bean.list}" varStatus="status">
<div id="#{class2.name}">
<h:form id="form">
<h:outputText value="#{class2.name}" />
</h:form>
</div>
</ui:repeat>
Or set it as style class of a JSF component, which is also just selectable via a CSS selector:
<ui:repeat var="class2" value="#{bean.list}" varStatus="status">
<h:form id="form" styleClass="#{class2.name}">
<h:outputText value="#{class2.name}" />
</h:form>
</ui:repeat>
See also:
JSTL in JSF2 Facelets... makes sense?
I have following code:
<ui:repeat var="class2" value="#{bean.list}" varStatus="status">
<h:form id="#{class2.name}">
<h:outputText value="#{class2.name}" />
</h:form>
</ui:repeat>
However, when I open the page, it errors as follows:
component identifier must not be a zero-length String
But it is properly printed in the <h:outputText>. How is this caused and how can I solve it?
You can use EL in the id attribute of a JSF component, but the EL variable has to be available during view build time, while the JSF component tree is to be built. However, the <ui:repeat> runs during view render time, while the HTML output is to be generated based on JSF component tree. The <ui:repeat var> is not available during view build time and #{class2.name} evaluates to null which totally explains the error you got. That it works in <h:outputText> is because it runs during view render time.
If you replace <ui:repeat> by <c:forEach>, which runs during view build time, then it'll work as you intented. The <c:forEach> will namely generate physically multiple <h:form> components in the JSF component tree which each generate individually their own HTML output (in contrary to <ui:repeat>, wherein the very same <h:form> component is been reused multiple times to generate HTML output).
<c:forEach var="class2" items="#{bean.list}" varStatus="status">
<h:form id="#{class2.name}">
<h:outputText value="#{class2.name}" />
</h:form>
</c:forEach>
However, I really wonder why you need to do that. There's usually no need to dynamically assign component IDs. JSF will already ensure the uniqueness of the ID. The below example,
<ui:repeat var="class2" value="#{bean.list}" varStatus="status">
<h:form id="form">
<h:outputText value="#{class2.name}" />
</h:form>
</ui:repeat>
will end up in multiple forms with each an unique ID, suffixed with iteration index of the <ui:repeat>. If you actually need to use #{class2.name} for some JavaScript/jQuery purposes (you did nowhere state the concrete functional requirement in the question for which you thought that this would be the right solution, so it's merely guessing), then just wrap it in a plain vanilla HTML element:
<ui:repeat var="class2" value="#{bean.list}" varStatus="status">
<div id="#{class2.name}">
<h:form id="form">
<h:outputText value="#{class2.name}" />
</h:form>
</div>
</ui:repeat>
Or set it as style class of a JSF component, which is also just selectable via a CSS selector:
<ui:repeat var="class2" value="#{bean.list}" varStatus="status">
<h:form id="form" styleClass="#{class2.name}">
<h:outputText value="#{class2.name}" />
</h:form>
</ui:repeat>
See also:
JSTL in JSF2 Facelets... makes sense?
<h:form>
<ui:repeat value="#{sampleManagedBean.food}" var="food">
<h:commandLink value="Name" action="#{sampleManagedBean.outcome}">
<f:param name="name" value="ssd" />
<f:param name="v" value="#{food.boy}" />
</h:commandLink>
<h2>#{food.boy}</h2>
</ui:repeat>
</h:form>
I can't get the the second <f:param> value which is set based on <ui:repeat var>. I can get only the first one which is hardcoded.
The ui:repeat is an UI component while f:param is a taghandler (like JSTL). Taghandlers run during view build time before UI components which run during view render time
(see here).
In our case it means that in the view build phase f:param knows nothing about #{food.boy}. c:forEach will be fine, but if we call some kind of ajax action to change the size of#{sampleManagedBean.food} and rerender the form, we'll not see any changes on page. Because partial rerendering (ajax) affects only UI component tree. c:forEach is somewhere between hardcoding and ui:repeat, we'll have to reload the page to see changes.
try this way,
<h:form>
<ui:repeat value="#{sampleManagedBean.food}" var="food">
<h:commandLink value="Name" action="#{sampleManagedBean.outcome}">
<f:setPropertyActionListener value="ssd" target="#{sampleManagedBean.name}" />
<f:setPropertyActionListener value="#{food.boy}" target="#{sampleManagedBean.v}" />
</h:commandLink>
</ui:repeat>
</h:form>
I've seen a strange problem in my project. It's that <h:commandButton/> does not execute the action method.
<c:choose>
<c:when test="#{empty param.t}">
// HTML
</c:when>
<c:when test="#{param.t eq 'normal'}">
// HTML
<h:form>
<h:commandButton value="ADD" action="#{addBean.doSomething}" />
</h:form>
<c:when>
</c:choose>
When I move <h:form> into first c:when, then the action method is called. Otherwise, it isn't. Why?
I'll ignore the syntax error in your EL (a missing }).
The command button won't be executed when #{param.t eq 'normal'} evaluates to false at the point the form submit request is to be processed. You need to maintain the same parameter for the subsequent request so that the button will be rendered so that JSF can confirm that the enduser is allowed to invoke the action. You can do this by adding a <f:param>:
<h:form>
<h:commandButton value="ADD" action="#{addBean.doSomething}">
<f:param name="t" value="#{param.t}" />
</h:commandButton>
</h:form>
Note that this is supported since JSF 2.0 only. On JSF 1.x you'd need to replace h:commandButton by a h:commandLink if you want f:param support.
Unrelated to the concrete problem, you should try to avoid JSTL as much as possible in your JSF views. If the intent is to render view parts conditionally (not to build view parts conditionally), then you should rather be using the JSF component's rendered attribute instead of a JSTL <c:choose> or <c:if>:
<h:panelGroup rendered="#{empty param.t}">
// HTML
</h:panelGroup>
<h:panelGroup rendered="#{param.t eq 'normal'}">
// HTML
<h:form>
<h:commandButton value="ADD" action="#{addBean.doSomething}" />
</h:form>
</h:panelGroup>