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I am working with MyFaces/Primefaces and I have a problem to get information using ajax. My page contains a list of panel, inside each panel, the user can select value in a dropdown list, and click on a checkbox which will update its panel (Ajax), I hope I am clear. This is my code:

<p:panel>
...
<h:selectOneMenu id="beanSet" value="#{myBean.selectedSet}">
    <f:selectItem itemLabel=" " noSelectionOption="true" />
    <f:selectItems value="#{langSet}" />
</h:selectOneMenu>


<h:selectBooleanCheckbox 
id="chkbxBeanSet"
value="#{myBean.selectedSetChkbx}" >
    <p:ajax 
    event="click" render="@parent"
    listener="#{action.updateSet}"
    execute="@form"
    immediate="true"
    />
</h:selectBooleanCheckbox>
...
<p:panel>

And here my java code:

public void updateSet(AjaxBehaviorEvent e) {
    UIComponent source = (UIComponent)e.getSource();
    System.out.println("Value:"+((HtmlSelectBooleanCheckbox)source).getValue());
    UIComponent parent = source.getParent();
    List<UIComponent> children = parent.getChildren();


    HtmlSelectOneMenu lvSet = (HtmlSelectOneMenu)parent.findComponent("beanSet");
    Object value = lvSet.getValue();
    System.out.println("value: " + value);

I get the beanSet component, but I can't get its value. As I understand, the getValue calls the getSelectedSet from myBean which is not set (it is in request scope). I don't understant how I can get the selected value in the dropdown list using ajax. Another way is to post all the form, but in that case, I have to determine which checkbox was clicked by the user... If someone can explain me where I am wrong?

2 Answers 2

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The culprit is immediate="true" on the ajax action. This will skip all input components which do not have this attribute set during the processing. You should finetune the to-be-processed components in the process attribute of <p:ajax>. Yes, another culprit is that you used execute instead of process. The <p:ajax> uses process where <f:ajax> uses execute. Also, the way how you accessed the dropdown value is unnecessarily overcomplicated. Just access the selectedSet property directly. JSF will set it in the same bean anyway.

So, this should do

<h:selectOneMenu id="beanSet" value="#{myBean.selectedSet}">
    <f:selectItem itemLabel=" " noSelectionOption="true" />
    <f:selectItems value="#{langSet}" />
</h:selectOneMenu>
<h:selectBooleanCheckbox id="chkbxBeanSet" value="#{myBean.selectedSetChkbx}">
    <p:ajax process="@this beanSet" listener="#{action.updateSet}" update="@parent" />
</h:selectBooleanCheckbox>

with

public void updateSet() {
    System.out.println(selectedSet);
}

Note that I omitted event="click" from <p:ajax>. It's already the default for checkboxes.

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place this (listener is optional) , the <f:ajax event="change" is what you need the most

<f:ajax event="change" render="IdsOfComponentToRender" listener="#{myBean.someMethod}" />

inside your <h:selectOneMenu id="beanSet" value="#{myBean.selectedSet}">

this is the signature of the listener

public void someMethod(AjaxBehaviorEvent ev) {...

b.t.w what is that updateLvSet method , and where you call it , and you should not access you data that way...

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  • For checkboxes and radio buttons it should really be click. Better is to just omit the whole event attribute altogether. It defaults to valueChange which will already generate the right DOM event for the particular component.
    – BalusC
    Mar 18, 2012 at 21:13
  • the f:ajax I suggested was told to be placed inside the <h:selectOneMenu (not the checkboxes) that why i wrote event=change (but i guess its still can be removed) ,(bad habit of mine :)
    – Daniel
    Mar 18, 2012 at 21:25
  • Hm, I think you misunderstood OP's concrete functional requirement Admittedly his code is confusing, he was a bit careless in simplifying/obfuscating method names; the updateLvSet method should actually be updateSet, as called by the <p:ajax> in the checkboxes.
    – BalusC
    Mar 18, 2012 at 21:29
  • @Daniel: sorry for the wrong name of the method, it was an error when copy/paste, I updated
    – 893
    Mar 18, 2012 at 21:34

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