Reputation: 460
I am a newbie with Spring MVC but I'm quite impressed with its capabilities.
I am using 3.1.0-RELEASE and I have to show a PDF in response to form:form submission.
Here is the (small) code I wrote in the controller:
@RequestMapping(value = "new_product", method = RequestMethod.POST, params = "print")
@ResponseBody
public void saveAndShowPDF(ModelMap map, ShippingRequestInfo requestInfo, HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse httpServletResponse) throws IOException {
saveProductChanges(map, requestInfo, request, httpServletResponse);
httpServletResponse.setContentType("application/pdf");
byte[] pdfImage = productService.getPDFImage(requestInfo.getRequestId());
httpServletResponse.getOutputStream().write(pdfImage);
}
This code sends the PDF byte[] back to the original window.
How do I get the PDF to be shown in a separate window so that I can still have the original browser window to show some other content? The best way would be to have the PDF shown using the client PDF view program (Adobe Reader, FoxIt etc.) but I would be fine with the PDF showing up in a separate browser window.
EDIT: I decided to set the Content-Disposition so that the browser brings up a save/open box where the user can open Adobe (with losing the main browser page).
httpServletResponse.setHeader("Content-Disposition","attachment;filename=cool.pdf");
Thanks everyone!
Upvotes: 7
Views: 14614
Reputation: 994
Use the @RequestMapping produces to define the reponse type.
@RequestMapping(value = doc/{docId}, method = RequestMethod.GET, produces = "application/pdf")
@ResponseBody
public byte[] getDocument(@PathVariable("docId") String docId) throws Exception
{
return service.getDocument(docId);
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 47994
You would do that on the client side with some javascript e.g.,:
<a href="http://www.myWebApp.com/somePdf.pdf" onclick="window.open('http://www.myWebApp.com/somePdf.pdf'); return false;" target="_blank">My Super Awesome Docment</a>
(substitute with pretty jQuery-ness as desired) If you want something else to happen in the main window just don't return false from the onClick event, and let the regular click do whatever thing it is that you want to happen in the main window
It's not up to you if PDFs open in a browser window or in Adobe, that's configuration on the user's computer.
--
Also, just as a Spring thing, @ResponseBody
on a void
method doesn't make any sense. @ResponseBody
is telling spring to use the method's return type as the Response. That is, you would return the byte[]
from the method and let spring deal with turning it into a servlet response. Rather than writing the response directly yourself inside the method
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 8386
Specify target="_blank"
in the form:form
tag that submits your form.
Upvotes: 5