Reputation: 612
I have been trying to run AJAX example in JSF. But I am getting "class does not have the property login". But in all the examples in various websites, code is same the same.
My index.xhtml
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"
xmlns:h="http://xmlns.jcp.org/jsf/html"
xmlns:f="http://java.sun.com/jsf/core">
<h:head>
<title>JSF AJAX Calls</title>
</h:head>
<h:body>
<h2>AJAX Example</h2>
<h:form>
<h:inputText id="inputName" value="#{userData.name}"></h:inputText>
<h:commandButton value="Login">
<f:ajax execute="inputName" render="outputMsg" />
</h:commandButton>
<br />
<hr />
<h2><h:outputText id="outputMsg" value="#{userData.login}" /></h2>
</h:form>
</h:body>
</html>
UserData.java
package com.cyb3rh4wk.test;
import java.io.Serializable;
import javax.faces.bean.ManagedBean;
import javax.faces.bean.SessionScoped;
@ManagedBean(name = "userData", eager = true)
@SessionScoped
public class UserData implements Serializable {
private String name;
public String getName() {
return name;
}
public void setName(String name) {
this.name = name;
}
public String login() {
if ("".equals(name) || name == null)
return "";
else
return "Logged in as " + name;
}
}
This is my error,
/index.xhtml value="#{userData.login}": The class 'com.cyb3rh4wk.test.UserData' does not have the property 'login'.
How do I resolve this error ?
Upvotes: 0
Views: 592
Reputation: 3309
The EL defines two kinds of expressions: value expressions and method expressions. Value expressions can either yield a value or set a value. Method expressions reference methods that can be invoked and can return a value.
Example of a value expression according to the above definition in your code is:
userData.name
In the following tag definition:
<h:outputText id="outputMsg" value="#{userData.login}" />
you are not using a value expression but rather a method expression because login is not a simple JavaBean getter returning the value of a bean property.
So you have to change the above line as:
<h:outputText id="outputMsg" value="Logged in as : #{userData.name}" />
And remove your login or use it for navigation purpose (that is why it is there).
Here is the reason (taken from JSF 2.0 specification) why you have to pass a value expression to an output component instead of a method expression:
4.1.10 UIOutput
UIOutput (extends UIComponentBase; implements ValueHolder) is a component that has a value, optionally retrieved from a model tier bean via a value expression (see Section 5.1 “Value Expressions”), that is displayed to the user. The user cannot directly modify the rendered value; it is for display purposes only:
Upvotes: 1