events
I\'ve searched the Internet and I cannot find a list of
events. Can anyone provide a complete list of events for the
Here's what I found during debug.
You can search for "Ajax Behavior Events" in PrimeFaces User's Guide, and you will find plenty of them for all supported components. That's also what PrimeFaces lead Optimus Prime suggest to do in this related question at the PrimeFaces forum <p:ajax> event list?
There is no onblur
event, that's the HTML attribute name, but there is a blur
event. It's just without the "on" prefix like as the HTML attribute name. You can also look at all "on*" attributes of the tag documentation of the component in question to see which are all available, e.g. <p:inputText>.
Schedule provides various ajax behavior events to respond user actions.
there is more in here https://www.primefaces.org/docs/guide/primefaces_user_guide_5_0.pdf
As the list of possible events is not tied to p:ajax
itself but to the component it is used with, you'll have to ask the component for which ajax events it supports.
There are multiple ways to determine the ajax events for a given component:
1) Ask the component in xhtml:
You can output the list directly in xhtml by binding that component to a request scoped variable and printing the eventNames
property:
<p:autoComplete binding="#{ac}"></p:autoComplete>
<h:outputText value="#{ac.eventNames}" />
This outputs
[blur, change, valueChange, click, dblclick, focus, keydown, keypress, keyup,
mousedown, mousemove, mouseout, mouseover, mouseup, select, itemSelect,
itemUnselect, query, moreText, clear]
2) Ask the component in java code:
Figure out the component implementation class and invoke its' implementation of javax.faces.component.UIComponentBase.getEventNames()
method:
import javax.faces.component.UIComponentBase;
public class SomeTest {
public static void main(String[] args) {
dumpEvents(new org.primefaces.component.inputtext.InputText());
dumpEvents(new org.primefaces.component.autocomplete.AutoComplete());
dumpEvents(new org.primefaces.component.datatable.DataTable());
}
private static void dumpEvents(UIComponentBase comp) {
System.out.println(
comp + ":\n\tdefaultEvent: " + comp.getDefaultEventName() + ";\n\tEvents: " + comp.getEventNames());
}
}
This outputs:
org.primefaces.component.inputtext.InputText@239963d8:
defaultEvent: valueChange;
Events: [blur, change, valueChange, click, dblclick, focus, keydown, keypress, keyup, mousedown, mousemove, mouseout, mouseover, mouseup, select]
org.primefaces.component.autocomplete.AutoComplete@72d818d1:
defaultEvent: valueChange;
Events: [blur, change, valueChange, click, dblclick, focus, keydown, keypress, keyup, mousedown, mousemove, mouseout, mouseover, mouseup, select, itemSelect, itemUnselect, query, moreText, clear]
org.primefaces.component.datatable.DataTable@614ffffd49:
defaultEvent: null;
Events: [rowUnselect, colReorder, tap, rowEditInit, toggleSelect, cellEditInit, sort, rowToggle, cellEdit, rowSelectRadio, filter, cellEditCancel, rowSelect, contextMenu, taphold, rowReorder, colResize, rowUnselectCheckbox, rowDblselect, rowEdit, page, rowEditCancel, virtualScroll, rowSelectCheckbox]
3) 'rtfm' ;-)
Best option is to look into the documentation of the particular component in use as hopefully provided by the component developers, not limited to PrimeFaces btw. (p:ajax
can be attached to any component providing ajax behaviors).
The advantage over previous suggestions is that the documentation not only provides the event names, but also enhanced description of the event potentially enriched with an event type class that can be caught by a listener.
For example the org.primefaces.event.SelectEvent
in case of
<p:ajax event="itemSelect" listener="#{anyBean.onItemSelect}"/>
and listener method signature public void onItemSelect(SelectEvent)
provides additional event contextual data.
Where there is no explicit list of ajax events on a compoment in the PrimeFaces documentation, the list of on* javascript callbacks can be used as events by removing the 'on' and using the remainder as an event name. The other answers in this question provides help on these plain dom events too.
Unfortunatelly, Ajax events are poorly documented and I haven't found any comprehensive list. For example, User Guide v. 3.5 lists itemChange event for p:autoComplete
, but forgets to mention change event.
If you want to find out which events are supported:
SelectOneMenu
are defined in forms.js)this.cfg.behaviors
referencesFor example, this section is responsible for launching toggleSelect event in SelectCheckboxMenu
component:
fireToggleSelectEvent: function(checked) {
if(this.cfg.behaviors) {
var toggleSelectBehavior = this.cfg.behaviors['toggleSelect'];
if(toggleSelectBehavior) {
var ext = {
params: [{name: this.id + '_checked', value: checked}]
}
}
toggleSelectBehavior.call(this, null, ext);
}
},
You might want to look at "JavaScript HTML DOM Events" for a general overview of events:
http://www.w3schools.com/jsref/dom_obj_event.asp
PrimeFaces is built on jQuery, so here's jQuery's "Events" documentation:
http://api.jquery.com/category/events/
http://api.jquery.com/category/events/form-events/
http://api.jquery.com/category/events/keyboard-events/
http://api.jquery.com/category/events/mouse-events/
http://api.jquery.com/category/events/browser-events/
Below, I've listed some of the more common events, with comments about where they can be used (taken from jQuery documentation).
Mouse Events
(Any HTML element can receive these events.)
click
dblclick
mousedown
mousemove
mouseover
mouseout
mouseup
Keyboard Events
(These events can be attached to any element, but the event is only sent to the element that has the focus. Focusable elements can vary between browsers, but form elements can always get focus so are reasonable candidates for these event types.)
keydown
keypress
keyup
Form Events
blur
(In recent browsers, the domain of the event has been extended to include all element types.)
change
(This event is limited to <input>
elements, <textarea>
boxes and <select>
elements.)
focus
(This event is implicitly applicable to a limited set of elements, such as form elements (<input>
, <select>
, etc.) and links (<a href>
). In recent browser versions, the event can be extended to include all element types by explicitly setting the element's tabindex property. An element can gain focus via keyboard commands, such as the Tab key, or by mouse clicks on the element.)
select
(This event is limited to <input type="text">
fields and <textarea>
boxes.)
submit
(It can only be attached to <form>
elements.)