22

How can I write a custom converter when working with PrimeFaces components that use a list of POJO? My particular problem is with <p:pickList>

<p:pickList converter="????" value="#{bean.projects}" var="project" 
                             itemLabel="#{project.name}" itemValue="#{project}">

Without a converter I get java.lang.ClassCastException because JSF sets the submitted values with unconverted java.lang.String submitted values.

6 Answers 6

41

It's possible, whithout other database access, but i don't know the best way. I use a very specific converter, works only for picklist. Try this:

@FacesConverter(value = "primeFacesPickListConverter")public class PrimeFacesPickListConverter implements Converter {
@Override
public Object getAsObject(FacesContext arg0, UIComponent arg1, String arg2) {
    Object ret = null;
    if (arg1 instanceof PickList) {
        Object dualList = ((PickList) arg1).getValue();
        DualListModel dl = (DualListModel) dualList;
        for (Object o : dl.getSource()) {
            String id = "" + ((Project) o).getId();
            if (arg2.equals(id)) {
                ret = o;
                break;
            }
        }
        if (ret == null)
            for (Object o : dl.getTarget()) {
                String id = "" + ((Project) o).getId();
                if (arg2.equals(id)) {
                    ret = o;
                    break;
                }
            }
    }
    return ret;
}

@Override
public String getAsString(FacesContext arg0, UIComponent arg1, Object arg2) {
    String str = "";
    if (arg2 instanceof Project) {
        str = "" + ((Project) arg2).getId();
    }
    return str;
}

and Picklist:

<p:pickList converter="primeFacesPickListConverter" value="#{bean.projects}" var="project" 
                        itemLabel="#{project.name}" itemValue="#{project}">

Work's for me, improvements is necessary.

7
  • 5
    This is the best solution. Querying the database in a converter is the worst thing one can do, i.e add 1000 items to the sourcelist, with at least one nested entity, and see what happens ;)
    – Stefan
    Feb 13, 2014 at 14:43
  • 1
    +1 because this is better than the accepted answer. exactly what i have been looking for.
    – Syed Anas
    Mar 13, 2014 at 9:51
  • by the way , can you tell me what is Project in your code? is it the dual list in bean? or var?
    – Syed Anas
    Mar 13, 2014 at 10:06
  • "Project" is a bean class from original question, in your code replace for necessary bean class. Or abstract the "getId()" in a generic interface and reuse this converter for another case, like this: stackoverflow.com/questions/19048801/… Mar 13, 2014 at 13:53
  • Thank you @BraullyRocha .. wonderful answer , beautiful thing is that in this answer you use the bean class. May 20, 2014 at 6:58
18

After research on how to write custom converter, here is the solution.
1. create a Java Class that implement javax.faces.convert.Converter;

public class ProjectConverter implements Converter{

   @EJB
   DocumentSBean sBean;

   public ProjectConverter(){
   }

   public Object getAsObject(FacesContext context, UIComponent component, String value){
     return sBean.getProjectById(value);
     //If u look below, I convert the object into a unique string, which is its id.
     //Therefore, I just need to write a method that query the object back from the 
     //database if given a id. getProjectById, is a method inside my Session Bean that
     //does what I just described
   }

   public String getAsString(FacesContext context, UIComponent component, Object value)     
   {
     return ((Project) value).getId().toString(); //--> convert to a unique string.
   }
}

2. Register your custom converter in faces-config.xml

<converter>
    <converter-id>projectConverter</converter-id>
    <converter-class>org.xdrawing.converter.ProjectConverter</converter-class>
</converter>

3. So now inside Primefaces component, u just do converter="projectConverter". Note that projectConverter is the <convert-id> I just created. So to solve my problem above, I do this:

<p:pickList converter="projectConverter" value="#{bean.projects}" var="project" 
                            itemLabel="#{project.name}" itemValue="#{project}">
6

Yes, you can write a converter that serializes/deserializes the objects in the picklist like this:

@FacesConverter(value="PositionMetricConverter")
public class PositionMetricConverter implements Converter {

    private static final Logger log = Logger.getLogger(PositionMetricConverter.class.getName());

    @Override
    public Object getAsObject(FacesContext facesContext, UIComponent uiComponent, String value) {
        try {
            byte[] data = Base64.decodeBase64(value);
            ObjectInputStream ois = new ObjectInputStream(new ByteArrayInputStream(data));
            Object o = ois.readObject();
            ois.close();
            return o;
        } catch (Exception e) {
            log.log(Level.SEVERE, "Unable to decode PositionMetric!", e);
            return null;
        }
    }

    @Override
    public String getAsString(FacesContext facesContext, UIComponent uiComponent, Object value) {
        try {
            ByteArrayOutputStream baos = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
            ObjectOutputStream oos = new ObjectOutputStream(baos);
            oos.writeObject(value);
            oos.close();

            return Base64.encodeBase64String(baos.toByteArray());
        } catch (IOException e) {
            log.log(Level.SEVERE, "Unable to encode PositionMetric!", e);
            return "";
        }
    }

}

Then apply this converter on your picklist like this:

<p:pickList converter="PositionMetricConverter" value="#{bean.positionMetrics}" 
    var="positionMetric" itemLabel="#{positionMetric.name}" itemValue="#{positionMetric}"/>

and make sure your objects are serializable.

4

This problem is not primefaces related, just general JSF related.

Why should you hit the database again? Your bean already contains the list of Objects you want to display in a component, or is it request scoped?

  • Create a Superclass for your Hibernate Pojo's containing an id field. If you don't want to create a super class just use the pojo class, but you need more converter classes.
  • With that Superclass you can create a generic converter for all Pojo Classes containing a list of Pojo's passed in the constructor.
  • Add the converter as a property in your session bean and use that converter in your JSF component.

If you access the final list via a get property in your bean or the nested one in the converter is of your choice.

public class SuperPojo
{
    protected Integer id;
    //constructor & getter
}

public class PojoTest extends SuperPojo 
{
    private String label = null;    
    //constructor & getter
}

public class SuperPojoConverter<T extends SuperPojo> implements Converter
{
    private Collection<T> superPojos;

    public IdEntityConverter(Collection<T> superPojos)
    {
        this.superPojos = superPojos;
    }

    @Override
    public Object getAsObject(FacesContext context, UIComponent component, String value)
    {
        //catch exceptions and empty or  null value!
        final int intValue = Integer.parseInt(value);
        for(SuperPojo superPojo : this.superPojos)
            if(superPojo.getId().intValue() == intValue)
                return superPojo;

        return null;
    }

    @Override
    public String getAsString(FacesContext context, UIComponent component, Object value)
    {
        //catch null and instanceof
        return String.valueOf(((SuperPojo)value).getId().intValue());
    }

    public Collection<T> getSuperPojos()
    {
        return this.superPojos;
    }
}

public class Bean 
{
    private SuperPojoConverter<PojoTest> pojoTestConverter = null;

    public Bean()
    {
        final List<PojoTest> pojoTests = //get list from hibernate
        this.pojoTestConverter = new SuperPojoConverter<PojoTest>(pojoTests);
    }

    public SuperPojoConverter<PojoTest> getPojoTestConverter()
    {
        return this.pojoTestConverter;
    }
}


<h:selectOneMenu value="#{selPojoTest}" converter="#{bean.getPojoTestConverter}">
    <f:selectItems value="#{bean.getPojoTestConverter.getSuperPojos}" var="varPojoTest" itemLabel="#{varPojoTest.label}" itemValue="#{varPojoTest}"/>
</h:selectOneMenu>
2

is there any way to implement that without 2 database hits?

I mean, when you have

#{bean.projects}

this is a database hit.

and when the converter puts

sBean.getProjectById(value);

is a unnecessary database hit, since bean.projects already have id and value of the objects

1
  • Interesting question. Unfortunately I honestly dont know. I think you should make this a question and see what the community say. If you do make this into a post, please give me the link. I do want to know about that as well.
    – Thang Pham
    Dec 22, 2010 at 7:55
2

Yes, it's possible:

public class DocumentSBean sBean implements Serializable{

private List<Document> projects;
// projects methods...
// ...

public Converter getDocumentConverter(){
 return docConverter;
}

private Converter docConverter = new Converter() {

        @Override
        public Object getAsObject(FacesContext context, UIComponent component, String value) {
            return projects.stream().filter(p -> p.getName().equals(value)).findFirst().orElse(null);
        }

        @Override
        public String getAsString(FacesContext context, UIComponent component, Object value) {
            return (value != null)
                    ? ((Document) value).toString()
                    : null;
        }
    };
}
<p:pickList converter="#{sBean.documentConverter}" value="#...

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