JSF 2 button and commandButton example
In JSF 2.0, both <h:button />
and <h:commandButton />
tags are used to render HTML input element of type button, with different mechanism to handle the navigation.
1. JSF h:commandButton
example
The “h:commandButton
” tag is released since JSF 1.x, you can declare the bean, which return the navigation outcome in the “action
” attribute. If browser’s with JavaScript disabled, the navigation is still working, because the navigation is handled via form post.
1. Submit button
//JSF
<h:commandButton value="submit" type="submit" action="#{user.goLoginPage}" />
//HTML output
<input type="submit" name="xxx" value="submit" />
2. Reset button
//JSF
<h:commandButton value="reset" type="reset" />
//HTML output
<input type="reset" name="xxx" value="reset" />
3. Normal button
//JSF
<h:commandButton value="button" type="button" />
//HTML output
<input type="button" name="xxx" value="button" />
4. Normal button with onclick event
//JSF
<h:commandButton value="Click Me" type="button" onclick="alert('h:commandButton');" />
//HTML output
<input type="button" name="xxx" value="Click Me" onclick="alert('h:commandButton');" />
2. JSF h:button example
The “h:button
” is a new tag in JSF 2.0, you can declared the navigation outcome directly in the “outcome
” attribute, no need to call a bean to return an outcome like “h:commandButton
” above. But, if browser’s with JavaScript disabled, the navigation will failed, because the “h:button
” tag is generate an “onclick
” event to handle the navigation via “window.location.href
”. See examples :
1. Normal button without outcome
//JSF
<h:button value="buton" />
//HTML output
<input type="button"
onclick="window.location.href='/JavaServerFaces/faces/currentpage.xhtml; return false;"
value="buton" />
P.S if the outcome attribute is omitted, the current page URL will treat as the outcome.
2. Normal button with an outcome
//JSF
<h:button value="buton" outcome="login" />
//HTML output
<input type="button"
onclick="window.location.href='/JavaServerFaces/faces/login.xhtml; return false;"
value="buton" />
3. Normal button with JavaScript.
//JSF
<h:button value="Click Me" onclick="alert('h:button');" />
//HTML output
<input type="button"
onclick="alert('h:button');window.location.href='/JavaServerFaces/faces/page.xhtml;return false;"
value="Click Me" />
My thought…
No really sure why JSF 2.0 released this “h:button
” tag, the JavaScript redirection is not practical, especially in JavaScript disabled browser. The best is integrate the “outcome” attribute into the “h:commandButton
” tag, hope it can be done in future release.