Writing Managed Bean Methods
Methods of a managed bean can perform several application-specific functions for components on the page. These functions include
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Performing processing associated with navigation
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Handling action events
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Performing validation on the component’s value
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Handling value-change events
Why Use Managed Beans
By using a managed bean to perform these functions, you eliminate the
need to implement the javax.faces.validator.Validator interface to
handle the validation or one of the listener interfaces to handle
events. Also, by using a managed bean instead of a Validator
implementation to perform validation, you eliminate the need to create a
custom tag for the Validator implementation.
In general, it is good practice to include these methods in the same managed bean that defines the properties for the components referencing these methods. The reason for doing so is that the methods might need to access the component’s data to determine how to handle the event or to perform the validation associated with the component.
The following sections explain how to write various types of managed bean methods.
Writing a Method to Handle Navigation
An action method, a managed bean method that handles navigation
processing, must be a public method that takes no parameters and returns
an Object, which is the logical outcome that the navigation system
uses to determine the page to display next. This method is referenced
using the component tag’s action attribute.
The following action method is from the managed bean CashierBean,
which is invoked when a user clicks the Submit button on the page. If
the user has ordered more than $100 worth of books, this method sets the
rendered properties of the fanClub and specialOffer components to
true, causing them to be displayed on the page the next time that page
is rendered.
After setting the components' rendered properties to true, this
method returns the logical outcome null. This causes the JavaServer
Faces implementation to re-render the page without creating a new view
of the page, retaining the customer’s input. If this method were to
return purchase, which is the logical outcome to use to advance to a
payment page, the page would re-render without retaining the customer’s
input. In this case, you want to re-render the page without clearing the
data.
If the user does not purchase more than $100 worth of books or if the
thankYou component has already been rendered, the method returns
bookreceipt. The JavaServer Faces implementation loads the
bookreceipt.xhtml page after this method returns:
public String submit() {
...
if ((cart().getTotal()> 100.00) && !specialOffer.isRendered()) {
specialOfferText.setRendered(true);
specialOffer.setRendered(true);
return null;
} else if (specialOffer.isRendered() && !thankYou.isRendered()) {
thankYou.setRendered(true);
return null;
} else {
...
cart.clear();
return ("bookreceipt");
}
}
Typically, an action method will return a String outcome, as shown in
the preceding example. Alternatively, you can define an Enum class
that encapsulates all possible outcome strings and then make an action
method return an enum constant, which represents a particular String
outcome defined by the Enum class.
The following example uses an Enum class to encapsulate all logical
outcomes:
public enum Navigation {
main, accountHist, accountList, atm, atmAck, transferFunds,
transferAck, error
}
When it returns an outcome, an action method uses the dot notation to
reference the outcome from the Enum class:
public Object submit(){
...
return Navigation.accountHist;
}
Writing a Method to Handle an Action Event
A managed bean method that handles an action event must be a public
method that accepts an action event and returns void. This method is
referenced using the component tag’s actionListener attribute. Only
components that implement javax.faces.component.ActionSource can refer
to this method.
In the following example, a method from a managed bean named
ActionBean processes the event of a user clicking one of the links on
the page:
public void chooseBookFromLink(ActionEvent event) {
String current = event.getComponent().getId();
FacesContext context = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance();
String bookId = books.get(current);
context.getExternalContext().getSessionMap().put("bookId", bookId);
}
This method gets the component that generated the event from the event
object; then it gets the component’s ID, which is a code for the book.
The method matches the code against a HashMap object that contains the
book codes and corresponding book ID values. Finally, the method sets
the book ID by using the selected value from the HashMap object.
Writing a Method to Perform Validation
Instead of implementing the javax.faces.validator.Validator interface
to perform validation for a component, you can include a method in a
managed bean to take care of validating input for the component. A
managed bean method that performs validation must accept a
javax.faces.context.FacesContext, the component whose data must be
validated, and the data to be validated, just as the validate method
of the Validator interface does. A component refers to the managed
bean method by using its validator attribute. Only values of UIInput
components or values of components that extend UIInput can be
validated.
public void validateNumberRange(FacesContext context,
UIComponent toValidate,
Object value) {
if (remainingGuesses <= 0) {
((UIInput) toValidate).setValid(false);
FacesMessage message = new FacesMessage("No guesses left!");
context.addMessage(toValidate.getClientId(context), message);
return;
}
int input = (Integer) value;
if (input < minimum || input> maximum) {
((UIInput) toValidate).setValid(false);
FacesMessage message = new FacesMessage("Invalid guess");
context.addMessage(toValidate.getClientId(context), message);
}
}
The validateNumberRange method performs two different validations.
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If the user has run out of guesses, the method sets the
validproperty of theUIInputcomponent tofalse. Then it queues a message onto theFacesContextinstance, associating the message with the component ID, and returns. -
If the user has some remaining guesses, the method then retrieves the local value of the component. If the input value is outside the allowable range, the method again sets the
validproperty of theUIInputcomponent tofalse, queues a different message on theFacesContextinstance, and returns.
Writing a Method to Handle a Value-Change Event
A managed bean that handles a value-change event must use a public
method that accepts a value-change event and returns void. This method
is referenced using the component’s valueChangeListener attribute.
This section explains how to write a managed bean method to replace the
javax.faces.event.ValueChangeListener implementation.
The following example tag comes from
Registering a Value-Change Listener on a
Component, where the h:inputText tag with the id of name has a
ValueChangeListener instance registered on it. This
ValueChangeListener instance handles the event of entering a value in
the field corresponding to the component. When the user enters a value,
a value-change event is generated, and the
processValueChange(ValueChangeEvent) method of the
ValueChangeListener class is invoked:
<h:inputText id="name"
size="30"
value="#{cashierBean.name}"
required="true"
requiredMessage="#{bundle.ReqCustomerName}">
<f:valueChangeListener
type="javaeetutorial.dukesbookstore.listeners.NameChanged" />
</h:inputText>
Instead of implementing ValueChangeListener, you can write a managed
bean method to handle this event. To do this, you move the
processValueChange(ValueChangeEvent) method from the
ValueChangeListener class, called NameChanged, to your managed bean.
Here is the managed bean method that processes the event of entering a
value in the name field on the page:
public void processValueChange(ValueChangeEvent event)
throws AbortProcessingException {
if (null != event.getNewValue()) {
FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext().
getSessionMap().put("name", event.getNewValue());
}
}
To make this method handle the ValueChangeEvent generated by an input
component, reference this method from the component tag’s
valueChangeListener attribute. See
Referencing a Method That Handles a
Value-Change Event for more information.