1

I have a login page containing a gwt bootstrap text box ,password text box and submit button

<g:VerticalPanel height="400px" width="50%">
                <b:WellForm  height="400px" ui:field="loginPanel">


                    <g:VerticalPanel horizontalAlignment="ALIGN_CENTER"
                        width="100%">
                        <b:FormLabel ui:field="emailErrorLabel" visible="false">
                            <font color="red">
                                <i>&nbsp;Please enter your login name</i>
                            </font>
                        </b:FormLabel>
                        <b:TextBox  alternateSize="LARGE" b:id="Email"
                            ui:field="Email" placeholder="E-mail"  width="335px"
                            height="30px" />
                    </g:VerticalPanel>


                    <g:VerticalPanel horizontalAlignment="ALIGN_CENTER" width="100%">
                        <b:FormLabel ui:field="passwordErrorLabel" visible="false">
                            <font color="red">
                                <i>&nbsp; Please enter password</i>
                            </font>
                        </b:FormLabel>
                        <b:PasswordTextBox  width="335px"
                            alternateSize="LARGE" ui:field="password" placeholder="Password"
                            height="30px" />
                    </g:VerticalPanel>
                    <b:Button type="PRIMARY" ui:field="loginButton" icon="SIGNIN">Login</b:Button></b:Wellform>

im setting following properties

loginPanel.setMethod("POST");
    loginPanel.getElement().setPropertyString("autocomplete", "on");
    Email.getElement().setAttribute("type", "text");
    password.getElement().setAttribute("type", "password");

and on click of login i'm calling an rpc which does the loggin in . What property am i missing .how can i get the browser to prompt save password option.

1 Answer 1

1

In order for a browser to detect a save-able password, you must have the following HTML:

<form>
    <input type="text" />
    <input type="password" />
</form>

Make sure your GWT code compiles into those elements in the browser. When that form does the "submit" action, the browser will ask to save the password. I think since you have a clickhandler to log in the user manually, instead of your form performing a POST, the browser doesn't realize it is a login.

Also, I believe you don't need this:

password.getElement().setAttribute("type", "password");

because <b:PasswordTextBox already compiles into <input type="password" />. It is probably also unnecessary for the "Email" field, but I'm not sure.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.