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I want to create a web page using JSF with the following table:

Item 1 | ( ) good ( ) ok ( ) bad
Item 2 | ( ) good ( ) ok ( ) bad
Item 3 | ( ) good ( ) ok ( ) bad
[…]

After a radio button has been checked, I immediately want to submit and process the rating. The current code for the dataTable looks as follows:

<h:dataTable value="#{bean.list}" var="item">
    <h:column>
        <h:outputText value="#{item.title}"/>
    </h:column>
    <h:column>
        <h:form>
        <h:selectOneRadio id="rate" value="#{bean.rate}">
            <f:selectItem itemValue="1" itemLabel="good" />
            <f:selectItem itemValue="0" itemLabel="ok" />
            <f:selectItem itemValue="-1" itemLabel="bad" />
            <f:ajax event="click" execute="rate" />
        </h:selectOneRadio>
        </h:form>
    </h:column>
</h:dataTable>

The problem I am now facing: I need to determine, which item was actually rated. Can somebody give me a hint how I can achieve this?

2 Answers 2

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You can choose among several techniques. For example, you could use a Map in your bean <h:selectOneRadio value="#{bean.ratePerItem[item]}"

Map<ItemClass, Integer> ratePerItem;

That way you must walk through the map looking for values. A simpler approach for your needs might be using a h:inputHidden which stores the item.

Or, maybe better, f:setPropertyActionListener. It depends on what you exactly want.

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  • Thank you, I just tried the Map approach, which works, but I cannot directly access, which Item was rated, right? The approach with inputHidden sounds better for me; can you go a bit more into detail? I add the following to my markup: <h:inputHidden id="currentItem" name="currentItem" value="#{item}" />, but how to access the item in the bean?
    – qqilihq
    Sep 18, 2012 at 14:49
  • Sorry, thought I solved the problem, but I was wrong :( I have the item in the hidden input now, but how can I obtain the item in the bean?
    – qqilihq
    Sep 18, 2012 at 15:27
  • With the Map approach you must iterate looking for true values. In fact this is useful for multiple selection. Sep 18, 2012 at 15:33
  • h:inputHidden would probably force you to convert to String and iterate. Give Map approach a try. Why would you not want to use it? Sep 18, 2012 at 15:36
  • The problem with the Map is, that I cannot figure out, which of the items was currently clicked when the event was triggered, right? Or am I understanding wrong?
    – qqilihq
    Sep 18, 2012 at 15:44
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Adding "rate" property to the Item class will help you determine easily which Item is rated.

<h:selectOneRadio id="rate" value="#{bean.rate}"
            <f:selectItem itemValue="1" itemLabel="good" />
            <f:selectItem itemValue="0" itemLabel="ok" />
            <f:selectItem itemValue="-1" itemLabel="bad" />
            <f:ajax event="click" execute="rate" />
        </h:selectOneRadio>

Change the above code to

<h:selectOneRadio id="rate" value="#{item.rate}">
            <f:selectItem itemValue="1" itemLabel="good" />
            <f:selectItem itemValue="0" itemLabel="ok" />
            <f:selectItem itemValue="-1" itemLabel="bad" />
            <f:ajax event="click" execute="rate" />
        </h:selectOneRadio>
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  • Surely this will technically work, but in this particular use case, the "rate" is not supposed to be tight-coupled to a specific "item" applicationwide, simply because it depends on the currently logged-in user! It makes designtechnically sense to separate it from the "item" as one-to-many relationship. In other words, this answer is not the right solution to OP's particular use case.
    – BalusC
    Sep 19, 2012 at 12:51

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