Trying to get Spring annotation based validation working in a simple webapp. While using @ModelAttribute along with @Valid, I am getting validation error next to the field, however when I am adding object to model, not getting error messages.
Suggest any alternative approach to display form validation error message(i.e. without using @ModelAtrribute along with @Valid)
Below is the code:
EmployeeModel.java
@Entity
@Table(name = "Employee")
public class EmployeeModel implements Serializable {
/**
*
*/
private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;
@Id
@Column(name = "ID")
@NotNull(message = "ID is required")
private Integer employee_id;
@Column(name = "Name")
@NotEmpty(message = "Name is required")
private String employee_name;
@Column(name = "Manager")
private String manager;
public Integer getEmployee_id() {
return employee_id;
}
public void setEmployee_id(Integer employee_id) {
this.employee_id = employee_id;
}
public String getEmployee_name() {
return employee_name;
}
public void setEmployee_name(String employee_name) {
this.employee_name = employee_name;
}
public String getManager() {
return manager;
}
public void setManager(String manager) {
this.manager = manager;
}
@Override
public String toString() {
return "Employee [id=" + employee_id + ", Name=" + employee_name
+ ", Manager=" + manager + "]";
}
}
Code snippet in Controller
@RequestMapping(value = "/save", method = RequestMethod.POST)
public String saveEmployee(Model model, @Valid EmployeeModel employee, BindingResult result) {
if (result.hasErrors()) {
model.addAttribute("employee", employee);
//model.addAttribute(employee);
return "EmployeeForm";
}
employeeService.addEmployee(employee);
return "forward:/";
}
View:
<form:form action="save" method="post" modelAttribute="employee">
<tr>
<td><form:label path="employee_id">Employee ID:</form:label></td>
<td><form:input path="employee_id" /></td>
<td><form:errors path="employee_id"/></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><form:label path="employee_name">Employee Name:</form:label></td>
<td><form:input path="employee_name" /></td>
<td><form:errors path="employee_name"/></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><form:label path="manager">Manager:</form:label></td>
<td><form:input path="manager" /></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td colspan="2" align="center"><input type="submit"
value="Save"></td>
</tr>
</form:form>
In case I use the commented line
//model.addAttribute(employee)
I get exception stating: java.lang.IllegalStateException: Neither BindingResult nor plain target object for bean name 'employee' available as request attribute.
Replacing the commented line with
model.addAttribute("employee",employee)
Page gets loaded with the previous value entered which means invalid object is not getting replaced, still error message is not displayed.
The above can be achieved using @ModelAttribute along with @Valid, but is there any other alternative i.e. without using @ModelAtrribute?
What is the difference in working with @ModelAttribute and Model, as till now I considered both works in similar way?
Model
andBindingResult
are both the model. However when usingModel
you loose all the additional information available inBindingResult
. Simply put don't use both, and what you do is something you shouldn't be doing. You aren't actually using a model but a just constructed object. Next to@Valid
add@ModelAttribute("employee")
to your method and remove theModel
argument. Relaunch...Model
and useresult.getModel().add("employee", employee)
might work. BUt why make it more complex, let Spring handle it for you.