66

Is it possible to define variable and reuse the variable later in EL expressions ?

For example :

<h:inputText 
   value="#{myBean.data.something.very.long}"
   rendered="#{myBean.data.something.very.long.showing}"
/>

What i have in mind is something like :

<!-- 
     somehow define a variable here like : 
     myVar = #{myBean.data.something.very.long} 
-->
<h:inputText 
   value="#{myVar}"
   rendered="#{myVar.showing}"
/>

Any ideas ? Thank you !

2 Answers 2

119

You can use <c:set> for this:

<c:set var="myVar" value="#{myBean.data.something.very.long}" scope="request" />

This EL expression will then be evaluated once and stored in the request scope. Note that this works only when the value is available during view build time. If that's not the case, then you'd need to remove the scope attribtue so that it becomes a true "alias":

<c:set var="myVar" value="#{myBean.data.something.very.long}" />

Note thus that this does not cache the evaluated value in the request scope! It will be re-evaluated everytime.

Do NOT use <ui:param>. When not used in order to pass a parameter to the template as defined in <ui:composition> or <ui:decorate>, and thus in essence abusing it, then the behavior is unspecified and in fact it would be a bug in the JSF implementation being used if it were possible. This should never be relied upon. See also JSTL in JSF2 Facelets... makes sense?

7
  • 2
    Wow, thanks ! I thought ui:param only supplies a variable to be used in a template, which makes use of ui:composition. Does that mean every jsf page that i make is a facelet even though im not using ui:composition ?
    – Bertie
    Jun 23, 2011 at 1:10
  • @BalusC, what do you mean by don't cache the value ? Dec 6, 2011 at 12:33
  • 8
    @Msaleh: Everytime you call #{myVar} then the #{myBean.data.something.very.long} will be re-evaluated. It will not be evaluated only once during the set. It's thus merely an "alias".
    – BalusC
    Dec 6, 2011 at 12:43
  • ok, it doesn't cache, but is there any reason why it shouldn't ? Jun 17, 2013 at 14:57
  • 2
    @user: Because, by default, EL expressions may evaluate to a different value depending on the moment you invoke it. E.g. depending on the current phase, iteration status of a repeating component, etc. If you want to explicitly set it in request, view, session or application scope use as answered the <c:set>.
    – BalusC
    Jun 17, 2013 at 15:09
19

Like any view in MVC, the page should be as simple as possible. If you want a shortcut, put the shortcut into the controller (the @ManagedBean or @Named bean).

Controller:

@Named
public MyBean
{
    public Data getData()
    {
        return data;
    }

    public Foo getFooShortcut()
    {
        return data.getSomething().getVery().getLong();
    ]
}

View:

<h:inputText 
   value="#{myBean.fooShortcut}"
   rendered="#{myBean.fooShortcut.showing}"
/>
1
  • Perfect solution to grab my <p:dataTable> metadata objects from the backing bean. Thanks!
    – nettie
    Feb 28, 2018 at 16:36

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