问题
According to https://code.google.com/p/primefaces/issues/detail?id=4720, The ComponentUtils.resolveWidgetVar(String expression, UIComponent component)
function is available in Primefaces since 2013. It can be used in EL by the "#{p:widgetVarFromContext(searchExpression, component)}"
function.
This is useful in case of several components have the same id in different NamingContainer
, but are still present in the same view. In this case,
the #{p:widgetVar(searchExpression)}
function only returns the last one found.
I don't understand however how to reference the UIComponent
that must be passed as the second argument from EL. The above mentioned bug report suggests we can refer to it using #{component}
. Can anyone provide me with an example?
回答1:
The #{component}
is an implicit EL variable referring the current UIComponent in EL scope (see also implicit EL objects). You can usually only refer it in component's HTML attribute or in template text children.
E.g. in case of <h:inputText>
it will reference an instance of UIInput class which has among others an isValid()
method.
<h:inputText id="foo" required="true"
style="background: #{component.valid ? '' : 'pink'}"
onclick="alert('Client ID of this component is #{component.clientId}');" />
You can also use binding
attribute to let JSF during view build time put a reference to a component instance in the Facelet scope. This way the component reference will be available anywhere in the Facelet during view render time.
<script>alert('Client ID of foo component is #{foo.clientId}');</script>
<h:inputText binding="#{foo}" />
See also:
- Difference between client id generated by component.clientId and p:component()
- JSF component binding without bean property
- How does the 'binding' attribute work in JSF? When and how should it be used?
回答2:
The p:widgetVarFromContext
is useful when referring to a PrimeFaces widget inside a composite component. There could be more than one instance of your component on the same page. So writing widgetVar="expression"
and PF('expression')
is out of the question. There would be multiple widgets with the same name. It is then better to omit the widgetVar
attribute and use the generated one which is unique because it is based on the clientId
.
You can't use #{p:widgetVar('expression')}
within your <cc:implementation>
because it leads to a Cannot find component for expression "expression" referenced from "j_id1"
error instead of the expected PF('widget_expression')
.
But you can use #{p:widgetVarFromContext('expression', cc)}
which will return something like PF('widget_wrapperform_compositecomponent1_expression')
. The cc
refers to the root of the composite component instance.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/29035760/what-exactly-is-component-in-el