I have a string (user message) and I would like to find (using regexp) special codes in it and replace them with links. (For example, @user
will be replaced with <a href="wicket-url-to-user-profile">user</a>
thing.) How can it be done in the Wicket? I do not ask about regular expressions, it is Wicket-focused question.
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Where would those links point? Within the application or to an external url?– biziclopJun 16, 2011 at 13:19
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Not sure what part you are asking about. The whole thing? Anyway, here is a good link for stackoverflow.com/questions/4234950/regex-for-beginners.– lindon foxJun 16, 2011 at 13:20
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Regexp is easy part. I'm asking about Wicket-part.– javapJun 16, 2011 at 13:21
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1Can you give an example of what you need? And which part you're unsure about.– biziclopJun 16, 2011 at 13:22
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For example, @user will be replaced with <a href="wicket-url-to-user-profile">user</a> thing.– javapJun 16, 2011 at 13:24
2 Answers
In fact, Wicket has a very powerful feature for this.
Let's say this is your localization string with the key "some.resource.key":
This is a ${user}.
Then you add the following to your Wicket template:
<wicket:message key="some.resource.key">
<a wicket:id="user">user</a>
</wicket:message>
In your Wicket page (or Panel), simply add your link as if you were adding it to the level where you put the wicket:message:
add(new Link("user"));
Now the link - you can use whatever implementation of link or any other component you like - is displayed correctly embedded in your localized string.
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As I said, text is some user message. We do not know what this text is, and if it contains any codes. User does not know syntax
${user_nick}
, text can contain syntax errors. And, so you need to define<a wicket:id="user">user</a>
for every user nick?– javapJun 16, 2011 at 16:12 -
Than this in fact is not a (purely) Wicket-related question. Find the string to replace using a regexp, extract the username, find the user and replace the string with a link. Easy as that. To get the correct URL to a Wicket page, you can use any component's urlFor() method.– LunikonJun 16, 2011 at 16:27
Wicket has IResponseFilter. With this you can post-process the final HTML. I.e. you can search for ${anything} and replace it with 'whatever you want'. To create nice looking URLs I suggest you to mount specific pages for the specific domain objects, e.g. Application#mountPage("/users/${user}", UsersPage.class), and create the urls with : RequestCycle.get().urlFor(UsersPage.class, pageParameters), where 'pageParameters' contains an entry with key 'user' and value 'whatever you extracted with RegEx'.