Reputation: 86637
Can I pass a input text field value to a bean method without binding the value to a bean property?
<h:inputText value="#{myBean.myProperty}" />
<h:commandButton value="Test" action="#{myBean.execute()} />
Can I do this without doing temporary save in #{myBean.myProperty}
?
Upvotes: 40
Views: 97308
Reputation: 1108567
Bind the component as UIInput
to the view and use UIInput#getValue()
to pass its value as method argument.
<h:inputText binding="#{input1}" />
<h:commandButton value="Test" action="#{myBean.execute(input1.value)}" />
with
public void execute(String value) {
// ...
}
Note that the value is this way already converted and validated the usual JSF way.
Upvotes: 56
Reputation: 85779
You can recover the parameters of the form by getting the Request and using plain Java EE ServletRequest#getParameter. When you use this method, remember to set the id and name of your components:
<h:form id="myForm">
<h:inputText id="txtProperty" /> <!-- no binding here -->
<input type="text" id="txtAnotherProperty" name="txtAnotherProperty" />
<h:commandButton value="Test" action="#{myBean.execute()} />
</h:form>
Managed Bean:
@ManagedBean
@RequestScoped
public class MyBean {
public void execute() {
HttpServletRequest request = (HttpServletRequest)FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext().getRequest();
String txtProperty = request.getParameter("myForm:txtProperty");
//note the difference when getting the parameter
String txtAnotherProperty= request.getParameter("txtAnotherProperty");
//use the value in txtProperty as you want...
//Note: don't use System.out.println in production, use a logger instead
System.out.println(txtProperty);
System.out.println(txtAnotherProperty);
}
}
Another thread with more info:
Upvotes: 18