Sumit Rathore
Sumit Rathore

Reputation: 491

How to use "map.get(key)" in Thymeleaf - Broadleaf Ecom

I have a Hashmap (String, List<Offers>), passed to a Thymeleaf page. I am getting this map on the page and I can access it.

How can I do map.get(key) with Thymeleaf? I just need to fetch the values based on a certain key and then parse and print that value, which I know and have the logic for.

I am running a Broadleaf application and Thymeleaf is the UI engine for it.

Upvotes: 37

Views: 89864

Answers (8)

Matt Coubrough
Matt Coubrough

Reputation: 3829

Using ${map.get(key)} (where key is a variable) works for me.

${map['key']} only seems to work for String literal keys -- if the key you're looking up is a variable then ${map[key]} doesn't seem to work.

###Accessing Map entries given a list of keys### Here's a full example, looking up items in a HashMap map given listOfKeys an ordered List of the keys of elements I want to get from the map. Using a separate listOfKeys like this lets me control the order of iteration, and optionally return only a subset of elements from the map:

<ul>
    <li th:each="key: ${listOfKeys}">
        <span th:text="${key}"></span> = <span th:text="${map.get(key)}"></span>
    </li>
</ul>

###Looping through every entry in a Map### If you do not have an ordered list of keys, but just want to loop through every item in the Map, then you can loop directly through the map's keySet() (But you will have no control of the ordering of keys returned if your map is a HashMap):

<ul>
    <li th:each="key: ${map.keySet()}">
        <span th:text="${key}"></span> = <span th:text="${map.get(key)}"></span>
    </li>
</ul>

This usage can be expressed even more concisely by simply iterating through the entrySet of the map, and accessing each returned entry's key and value members:

<ul>
    <li th:each="entry: ${map}">
        <span th:text="${entry.key}"></span> = <span th:text="${entry.value}"></span>
    </li>
</ul>

Upvotes: 42

Clyde Symonette
Clyde Symonette

Reputation: 39

All of the answers lead me in the right direction. The following code from (a table column detail) works:

<td>[[${statusesMap.get('__${employee.status}__')}]]</td>

statusesMap is a Map<String, String> Employee is an employee class with a field called 'status'.

Note the single quotes. It did not work without them.

Upvotes: 0

R M
R M

Reputation: 43

remarksMap is TreeMap and "id" is Long type value

<div th:if="${#maps.containsKey(remarksMap, id)}">
   <textarea th:text="${remarksMap.get(id)}" rows="2" cols="30" maxlength="250" 
       autocomplete="off"></textarea>                               
</div>

Upvotes: 1

Hany Sakr
Hany Sakr

Reputation: 2939

I am using with drop down box the following for example to loop keys on maps

<select id="testId">
        <option th:each="item: ${itemsMap}" 
                th:value="${item['key']}"
                th:text="${item['value']}" />
</select>

in case of getting a specific value, I'm using

${itemsMap.get('key')}

Upvotes: 10

fstef
fstef

Reputation: 379

In my situation, where I had a HashMap<String, String>, I had to do the lookup like this

<strong th:text="${map['__${entry.key}__']}"></strong>

Upvotes: 5

Vlad
Vlad

Reputation: 481

The way to access the value:

${map[__${key}__]}

You have to put the key between doubled underscores to make a pre-processing for the key variable.

Upvotes: 9

Leandro Carracedo
Leandro Carracedo

Reputation: 7345

The way to access the map value for a certain key keyaccess, assuming you have the map mymap in your model:

${mymap['keyaccess']}

That would give you the list associated to your entry, now you could iterate it.

In case you need, you could iterate a map in the same way you could iterate any other supported iterable objects, from the documentation:

Not only java.util.List objects can be used for iteration in Thymeleaf. In fact, there is a quite complete set of objects that are considered iterable by a th:each attribute:

  • Any object implementing java.util.Iterable
  • Any object implementing java.util.Map. When iterating maps, iter variables will be of class java.util.Map.Entry.
  • Any array
  • Any other object will be treated as if it were a single-valued list containing the object itself.

Upvotes: 3

Prabhat
Prabhat

Reputation: 850

You can simply use ${map.get('key')}

Upvotes: 26

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