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You're reading from  PrimeFaces Beginner's Guide

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2013
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781783280698
Edition1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1)
Siva Prasad Reddy Katamreddy
Siva Prasad Reddy Katamreddy
author image
Siva Prasad Reddy Katamreddy

K. Siva Prasad Reddy is a Senior Software Engineer living in Hyderabad, India, and having more than seven years of experience in developing enterprise applications with Java and JavaEE technologies. Siva is a Sun Certified Java Programmer and has a lot of experience in server-side technologies such as Java, JavaEE, Spring, Hibernate, MyBatis, JSF, PrimeFaces, and WebServices (SOAP/REST). Siva is also the author of Java Persistence with MyBatis 3, Packt Publishing. Siva normally shares the knowledge he has acquired on his blog at www.sivalabs.in. If you want to find out more about his work, you can follow him on Twitter (@sivalabs) and GitHub (https://github.com/sivaprasadreddy).
Read more about Siva Prasad Reddy Katamreddy

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Time for action – validating the user registration form


We can use JSF validations for performing the earlier mentioned validations on the registration form. We can also perform validations using PrimeFaces AJAX-based validations by hooking up with JavaScript events, for this perform the following steps:

  1. Update registrationWithVal.xhtml to build a user registration form along with validation support using the following code:

    <!DOCTYPE html>
    <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"
          xmlns:h="http://java.sun.com/jsf/html"
          xmlns:f="http://java.sun.com/jsf/core"
          xmlns:ui="http://java.sun.com/jsf/facelets"
          xmlns:p="http://primefaces.org/ui">
    
    <h:head>
      <title>Registration</title>
    </h:head>
    <body> 
      <h:form id="registrationForm">
        <p:panel header="Registration Form" style="width: 800px;">
        <p:messages />
        <h:panelGrid columns="3">
          <p:outputLabel value="UserName:*"/>
          <p:inputText id="userName" value="#{userController.registrationUser.userName}"
              required="true" label="UserName" >
            <p:ajax event="keyup"  update="userNameMsg"/>
          </p:inputText>
          <p:message id="userNameMsg" for="userName"/>
          
          <p:outputLabel value="Password:*"/>
          <p:password id="password" value="#{userController.registrationUser.password}"
                required="true" label="Password">
            <f:validateLength minimum="4"/>
            <p:ajax update="passwordMsg" event="keyup"/>
          </p:password>
          <p:message id="passwordMsg" for="password"/>
          
          <p:outputLabel value="FirstName:*"/>
          <p:inputText id="firstName" value="#{userController.registrationUser.firstName}"
                 required="true" label="FirstName">
          
          </p:inputText>
          <p:message id="firstNameMsg" for="firstName"/>
          
          <p:outputLabel value="LastName:"/>
          <p:inputText id="lastName" value="#{userController.registrationUser.lastName}"/>
          <p:message id="lastNameMsg" for="lastName"/>
          
          <p:outputLabel value="Email:"/>
          <p:inputText id="email" value="#{userController.registrationUser.email}"/>
          <p:message id="emailMsg" for="email"/>
          
          <p:outputLabel value=""/>
          <p:commandButton action="#{userController.register}" value="Register" update="registrationForm"/>
          <p:outputLabel value=""/>
          
            
        </h:panelGrid>
        </p:panel>
      </h:form>
    </body>
    </html>
  2. Run the application and point your browser to http://localhost:8080/chapter1/registrationWithVal.jsf. Leave UserName and FirstName blank and enter password with less than four characters and submit the form. Then Registration Form will be redisplayed with errors as shown in the following screenshot:

What just happened?

We have used input validations such as required, minimum length, and so on. We have used PrimeFaces AJAX-based validations using <p:ajax> on the keyup JavaScript event. So as you type in the password, it will get validated and update the validation message immediately. You can also use <p:ajax> with other JavaScript events such as keydown, keypress, mouseover, and so on.

Tip

Beware of registering AJAX event listeners for JavaScript events such as keyup, keydown, and so on; as it may increase processing overhead and degrade performance. So use this feature cautiously.

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Author (1)

author image
Siva Prasad Reddy Katamreddy

K. Siva Prasad Reddy is a Senior Software Engineer living in Hyderabad, India, and having more than seven years of experience in developing enterprise applications with Java and JavaEE technologies. Siva is a Sun Certified Java Programmer and has a lot of experience in server-side technologies such as Java, JavaEE, Spring, Hibernate, MyBatis, JSF, PrimeFaces, and WebServices (SOAP/REST). Siva is also the author of Java Persistence with MyBatis 3, Packt Publishing. Siva normally shares the knowledge he has acquired on his blog at www.sivalabs.in. If you want to find out more about his work, you can follow him on Twitter (@sivalabs) and GitHub (https://github.com/sivaprasadreddy).
Read more about Siva Prasad Reddy Katamreddy