1

I have a client-side script in which I initiate some SSJS to collect string values that reside in a strings.properties file:

function confirmBeforeDelete(){
    var msgEmptySelection = "#{javascript:strings['empty']}";
    var msgConfirm = "#{javascript:strings['confirm']}";
    if(!XSP.isViewPanelRowSelected("#{id:vwPnlDefault}", "col1")) {
        !XSP.alert(msgEmptySelection);
        return false;
    }
    if(!XSP.confirm(msgConfirm)) {return false;}    
}

This works fine. But when I store the script in a csjs library my text messages becomes: #{javascript:strings['empty']} and #{javascript:strings['confirm']}. What am I doing wrong?

1 Answer 1

6

You can't put CSJS code with SSJS parts into a CSJS library. The SSJS part gets executed on server first and the modificated code is sent to client then. A CSJS library is sent to client unchanged. That's why you see the SSJS code there.

You can add parameters to your function

function confirmBeforeDelete(msgEmptySelection, msgConfirm, vwPnlDefaultId){
    if(!XSP.isViewPanelRowSelected(vwPnlDefaultId, "col1")) {
        !XSP.alert(msgEmptySelection);
        return false;
    }
    if(!XSP.confirm(msgConfirm)) {return false;}    
}

so that the function is pure CSJS code and can be stored in a CSJS library.
You'd call your function in XPage with the parameters:

confirmBeforeDelete("#{javascript:strings['empty']}", "#{javascript:strings['confirm']}", 
                    "#{id:vwPnlDefault}")

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.