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I need to call a bean method before a <p:dialog> is shown. Currently I have something like the following:

<p:remoteCommand name="updateDialog" action="#{someBean.init()}"
                 update="dialog-table" global="true" />
<p:dialog id="someDialog" modal="true" dynamic="false" onShow="updateDialog()">
    <ui:include src="some-dialog-content.xhtml" />
</p:dialog>

Not too bad, and it even works, but there still is a problem. This dialog is shown via a call to RequestContext from Java code, and there is also a global ajaxStatus element which shows status dialog with a spinner when ajax call is sent and hides it when this call completes. However, someBean.init() may also take some time to complete, so I want to show this status dialog also when this init() is in progress (this is why I set global to true - as far as I understand, it should trigger ajaxStatus, and consequently, status dialog). However, this does not work. Status dialog is not shown during someBean.init() call.

As far as I can tell, this is happening because somehow this remove command is called before previous request (which resulted in RequestContext being updated and someDialog being shown) complete event was called. However, just after someBean.init() request is sent, this complete event is called, and status dialog vanishes before someBean.init() completes.

The only workaround I could find is second status dialog, copied from the main one:

<p:dialog modal="true" widgetVar="statusDialog2" ...>...</p:dialog>
<p:remoteCommand name="updateDialog" action="#{someBean.init()}"
                 update="dialog-table" global="true"
                 onstart="statusDialog2.show()" oncomplete="statusDialog2.hide()" />
<p:dialog id="someDialog" modal="true" dynamic="false" onShow="updateDialog()">
    <ui:include src="some-dialog-content.xhtml" />
</p:dialog>

This works just as I need, but it is very ugly. Is there a way to do what I want in a more cleaner way?

I'm using JSF 2.1 and Primefaces 3.4.1.

1 Answer 1

-1

call the method before Requestcontext

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