2. Using the Tutorial Examples
3. Getting Started with Web Applications
5. JavaServer Pages Technology
7. JavaServer Pages Standard Tag Library
10. JavaServer Faces Technology
11. Using JavaServer Faces Technology in JSP Pages
The Example JavaServer Faces Application
Adding UI Components to a Page Using the HTML Component Tags
The style and styleClass Attributes
The value and binding Attributes
Rendering a Text Field with the inputText Tag
Rendering a Label with the outputLabel Tag
Rendering a Hyperlink with the outputLink Tag
Displaying a Formatted Message with the outputFormat Tag
Rendering a Password Field with the inputSecret Tag
Using Command Components for Performing Actions and Navigation
Rendering a Button with the commandButton Tag
Rendering a Hyperlink with the commandLink Tag
Using Data-Bound Table Components
Adding Graphics and Images with the graphicImage Tag
Laying Out Components with the UIPanel Component
Rendering Components for Selecting One Value
Displaying a Check Box Using the selectBooleanCheckbox Tag
Displaying a Menu Using the selectOneMenu Tag
Rendering Components for Selecting Multiple Values
The UISelectItem, UISelectItems, and UISelectItemGroup Components
Displaying Error Messages with the message and messages Tags
Converting a Component's Value
Registering Listeners on Components
Registering a Value-Change Listener on a Component
Registering an Action Listener on a Component
Validating a Component's Value
Binding Component Values and Instances to External Data Sources
Binding a Component Value to a Property
Binding a Component Value to an Implicit Object
Binding a Component Instance to a Bean Property
Binding Converters, Listeners, and Validators to Backing Bean Properties
Referencing a Backing Bean Method
Referencing a Method That Performs Navigation
Referencing a Method That Handles an Action Event
Referencing a Method That Performs Validation
Referencing a Method That Handles a Value-change Event
12. Developing with JavaServer Faces Technology
13. Creating Custom UI Components
14. Configuring JavaServer Faces Applications
15. Internationalizing and Localizing Web Applications
16. Building Web Services with JAX-WS
17. Binding between XML Schema and Java Classes
19. SOAP with Attachments API for Java
21. Getting Started with Enterprise Beans
23. A Message-Driven Bean Example
24. Introduction to the Java Persistence API
25. Persistence in the Web Tier
26. Persistence in the EJB Tier
27. The Java Persistence Query Language
28. Introduction to Security in the Java EE Platform
29. Securing Java EE Applications
31. The Java Message Service API
32. Java EE Examples Using the JMS API
36. The Coffee Break Application
37. The Duke's Bank Application
JavaServer Faces applications make use of three different kinds of data that can be localized:
Static text, such as labels, alternative text, and tool tips
Error messages, such as those displayed when validation of user input data fails
Dynamic data, which is data that must be set dynamically by server-side objects, such as by backing beans
This section discusses how to access the first two kinds of data from the page. Performing Localization explains how to produce localized error messages as well as how to localize dynamic data. If you are not familiar with the basics of localizing web applications, see Chapter 15, Internationalizing and Localizing Web Applications.
All data in the Duke’s Bookstore application have been localized for Spanish, French, German, and American English. The image map on the first page allows you to select your preferred locale. See Chapter 13, Creating Custom UI Components for information on how the image map custom component was created.
All the localized data is stored in resource bundles, which are represented as either ResourceBundle classes or text files, usually with the extension .properties. For more information about resource bundles, see http://download.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/i18n/index.html.
After the application developer has produced a resource bundle, the application architect puts it in the same directory as the application classes. The static text data for the Duke’s Bookstore application is stored in a ResourceBundle class called BookstoreMessages. The error messages are stored in another resource bundle called ApplicationMessages. After the resource bundles have been created and before their data can be accessed, they must be made available to the application, as explained in the following section.
To reference error messages or static data from the page, you first need to make available the resource bundle containing the data.
To make available resource bundles that contain static data, you need to do one of two things:
Register the resource bundle with the application in the configuration file using the resource-bundle element, as explained in Registering Custom Localized Static Text.
Load the resource bundle into the current view using the loadBundle tag.
Here is an example loadBundle tag from bookstore.jsp:
<f:loadBundle var="bundle" basename="messages.BookstoreMessages" />
The basename attribute value specifies the fully-qualified class name of the ResourceBundle class, which in this case is located in the messages package of the bookstore application.
The var attribute is an alias to the ResourceBundle class. This alias can be used by other tags in the page in order to access the localized messages.
In the case of resource bundles that contain error messages, you need to register the resource bundle with the application in the configuration file using the message-bundle element, as explained in Registering Custom Error Messages. One exception is if you are referencing the error messages from the input component attributes described in Referencing Error Messages. In that case, you load the resource bundles containing these messages in the same way you load resource bundles containing static text.
To reference static localized data from a resource bundle, you use a value expression from an attribute of the component tag that will display the localized data. You can reference the message from any component tag attribute that is enabled to accept value expressions.
The value expression has the notation var.message, in which var matches the var attribute of the loadBundle tag or the var element in the configuration file, and message matches the key of the message contained in the resource bundle, referred to by the var attribute. Here is an example from bookstore.jsp:
<h:outputText value="#{bundle.Talk}"/>
Notice that bundle matches the var attribute from the loadBundle tag and that Talk matches the key in the ResourceBundle.
Another example is the graphicImage tag from chooselocale.jsp:
<h:graphicImage id="mapImage" url="/template/world.jpg" alt="#{bundle.ChooseLocale}" usemap="#worldMap" />
The alt attribute is enabled to accept value expressions. In this case, the alt attribute refers to localized text that will be included in the alternative text of the image rendered by this tag.
See Creating Custom Component Classes and Enabling Component Properties to Accept Expressions for information on how to enable value binding on your custom component’s attributes.
A JavaServer Faces page uses the message or messages tags to access error messages, as explained in Displaying Error Messages with the message and messages Tags.
The error messages that these tags access include:
The standard error messages that accompany the standard converters and validators that ship with the API. See section 2.5.4 of the JavaServer Faces specification, version 1.2, for a complete list of standard error messages.
Custom error messages contained in resource bundles registered with the application by the application architect using the message-bundle element in the configuration file.
Custom error messages hard coded in custom converter and validator classes.
When a converter or validator is registered on an input component, the appropriate error message is automatically queued on the component.
A page author can override the error messages queued on a component by using the following attributes of the component’s tag:
converterMessage: References the error message to display when the data on the enclosing component can not be converted by the converter registered on this component.
requiredMessage: References the error message to display when no value has been entered into the enclosing component.
validatorMessage: References the error message to display when the data on the enclosing component cannot be validated by the validator registered on this component.
All three attributes are enabled to take literal values and value expressions. If an attribute uses a value expression, this expression references the error message in a resource bundle. This resource bundle must be made available to the application in one of the following ways:
By the page author using the loadBundle tag
By the application architect using the resource-bundle element in the configuration file
Conversely, the message-bundle element must be used to make available to the application those resource bundles containing custom error messages that are queued on the component as a result of a custom converter or validator being registered on the component.
The bookcashier.jsp page includes an example of the requiredMessage attribute using a value expression to reference an error message:
<h:inputText id="ccno" size="19" required="true" requiredMessage="#{customMessages.ReqMessage}"> ... </h:inputText> <h:message styleClass="error-message" for="ccno"/>
The value expression that requiredMessage is using in this example references the error message with the ReqMessage key in the resource bundle, customMessages.
This message replaces the corresponding message queued on the component and will display wherever the message or messages tag is placed on the page.
See Registering Custom Error Messages and Registering Custom Localized Static Text for information on how to use the message-bundle and resource-bundle element to register resource bundles that contain error messages.
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