I want to pass value to remoteCommand
from javascript. If this is possible, how can I do that and how can I receive them in the backing bean?
7 Answers
Yes, it is possible. How to do that depends on the PrimeFaces version. You can see it in PrimeFaces users guide.
PrimeFaces 3.3 or newer
Since PrimeFaces version 3.3 the syntax is as follows (copypasted from 3.3 users guide).
3.81 RemoteCommand
...
Passing Parameters
Remote command can send dynamic parameters in the following way;
increment([{name:'x', value:10}, {name:'y', value:20}]);
This way offers the possibility to specify multiple values on a single parameter name. Parameters with single values like above are available the same way as the old way:
@ManagedProperty("#{param.x}")
private int x;
@ManagedProperty("#{param.y}")
private int y;
(note: you can use Integer
in Mojarra, but not in MyFaces, this is further completely unrelated to <p:remoteCommand>
)
or in method of a broader scoped bean:
Map<String, String> params = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext().getRequestParameterMap();
int x = Integer.valueOf(params.get("x"));
int y = Integer.valueOf(params.get("y"));
If you need to specify a parameter with multiple values, then you could do it as follows:
functionName([{name:'foo', value:'one'}, {name:'foo', value:'two'}, {name:'foo', value:'three'}]);`
with in a request scoped bean:
@ManagedProperty("#{paramValues.foo}")
private String[] foos;
or in method of a broader scoped bean:
Map<String, String[]> paramValues = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext().getRequestParameterValuesMap();
String[] foos = paramValues.get("foo");
PrimeFaces 3.2 or older
Before PrimeFaces version 3.3 the syntax is as follows (copypasted from 3.2 users guide):
3.80 RemoteCommand
...
Passing Parameters
Remote command can send dynamic parameters in the following way;
increment({param1:'val1', param2:'val2'});
It's available in the backing bean by usual means. E.g. in a request scoped bean:
@ManagedProperty("#{param.param1}")
private String param1;
@ManagedProperty("#{param.param2}")
private String param2;
or in method of a broader scoped bean:
Map<String, String> params = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext().getRequestParameterMap();
String param1 = params.get("param1");
String param2 = params.get("param2");
This approach had however the disadvantage that you can't specify a single parameter with multiple values like as possible with normal HTML forms and HTTP request parameters (which is in real world used on e.g. multiple select dropdownlist and multiple select checkboxgroup).
See also:
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lol, I need to pass string[] array from js and the only way is to set one by one all params? Can you show sample of that? Anyway +1 for this answer :) Mar 24, 2017 at 17:42
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I'm using Primefaces 2.1, but suggested sollution is not working for me. I have written question here stackoverflow.com/questions/63819389/…. Could someone tell me what am I doing wrong?– PatrikSep 9, 2020 at 21:01
Page:
<p:remoteCommand name="command" action="#{bean.method}" />
JavaScript:
command({param: 'value'});
Bean:
public void method() {
String value = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext().getRequestParameterMap().get("param");
}
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Thank you for this simple answer! Unfortunately it seems impossible to define
action="#{bean.method(param)}"
, which would avoid the call toFacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext().getRequestParameterMap().get("param")
in the bean? Mar 6, 2015 at 11:36 -
1@geceo I haven't worked with JSF for a while, but I guess it should be possible to implement a utility which allows you to write something like
action="#{bean.method(Utility.getParam("param"))}"
.– JoelMar 6, 2015 at 13:57 -
3@GrégoireColbert and @Joel, it is possible, just write
action="#{bean.method(param.param)}"
. The mapparam
is the EL represenation ofFacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext().getRequestParameterMap()
. Feb 3, 2016 at 14:01 -
3
remoteCommandFunctionName({name1:'value1', name2:'value2'});
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You don't recieve the value in remoteCommand, you just use another component that you can tell remoteCommand to update. You set your field/s in your backing bean with the new values you want using p:remoteCommand, then set the update="component2" attribute of p:remoteCommand to point to a second component, then you set the value of the second component by simply calling the updated fields in the bean by adding value="#{myBean.value}". Apr 11, 2015 at 8:47
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5Since 3.3 parameter passing format is your_command( [ {name:'x', value:10}, {name:'y', value:20} ] ); May 6, 2015 at 18:06
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I'm using primefaces 3.3 and above but this fix doesn't work. The parameterMap is null <code>onclick="rc(([{name: 'emailInstance', value:#{notification.emailInstanceId}}]))" </code>– ArvindJul 15, 2020 at 18:15
Combine @BalusC @Joel's post for a functional example
<h:form>
<p:remoteCommand name="rcName" update="msgs" actionListener="#{remoteCommandView.beanMethod}" />
<p:growl id="msgs" showDetail="true" />
<p:commandButton type="button" onclick="rcName([{name:'model', value:'Buick Encore'}, {name:'year', value:2015}]);" value="Pass Parameters 1" /><br/>
<p:commandButton type="button" onclick="clicked();" value="Pass Parameters 2" />
</h:form>
<script type="text/javascript">
//<![CDATA[
function clicked(){
rcName([{name:'model', value: 'Chevy Volt'}, {name:'year', value:2016}]);
}
//]]>
</script>
@ManagedBean
public class RemoteCommandView {
public void beanMethod() {
// OR - retrieve values inside beanMethod
String model1 = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext().getRequestParameterMap().get("model");
String year1 = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext().getRequestParameterMap().get("year");
FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().addMessage(null, new FacesMessage(FacesMessage.SEVERITY_INFO, "Executed",
"Using RemoteCommand with parameters model := " + model + ", year := " + year));
}
@ManagedProperty("#{param.model}")
private String model;
@ManagedProperty("#{param.year}")
private int year;
public void setModel(String model) {
this.model = model; // value set by JSF
}
public void setYear(int year) {
this.year = year;
}
}
When you need to pass more than one parameter from javascript, the syntax is:
var param1 = ...;
var param2 = ...;
var param3 = ...;
remoteCommandFunction([{name:'param1', value:param1}, {name:'param2',value:param2}, {name:'param3',value:param3}]);
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@BalusC I tried Cagatay's example but with more than one parameter it didn't work (weird, huh?). Passing parameters as foo({name1:'value1', name2:'value2'}); does not send correctly the parameters to RequestParameterMap, so I tried specifying name and value for each parameter and wrapping them in an array foo([{name:'name1', value:'value1'}, {name:'name2', value:'value2'}]); Jun 17, 2013 at 14:02
If you want to call your own function, eg. a confirm dialog, your custom function must be compliant to the passing parameter style. eg:
<p:commandLink id="myId" onclick="confirmDelete([{name:'Id', value: '#{my.id}'}]);" immediate="true">
The java script function
function confirmDelete(id) {
if (confirm('Do you really want to delete?')) {
remoteDeleteDemand(id);
return true;
}
The remoteCommand tag
<p:remoteCommand name="remoteDeleteDemand" actionListener="#{myController.doDelete}" />
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I believe the JS call (remoteDeleteDemand(id)) and
name
attribute of the<p:remoteCommand>
(remoteDelete) should match, shouldn't they? Mar 6, 2015 at 13:22 -
PrimeFace 5.0, dynamic array (all table column width will be send by this method)
Beam
public void updateTableColumnsWidth() {
FacesContext context = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance();
Map<String, String> map = context.getExternalContext().getRequestParameterMap();
}
p:remoteCommand
<h:form>
<p:remoteCommand name="remoteCommand" action="#{controller.updateTableColumnsWidth}" />
</h:form>
JS
<script type="text/javascript">
function updateTableColumnsWidth () {
var columnsCount = document.getElementById('table').rows[0].cells.length;
var json = [];
for (var i = 0; i < columnsCount; i++) {
json[i] = { name: i, value: document.getElementById('table').rows[0].cells[i].offsetWidth};
}
console.log(json);
remoteCommand(json);
};
</script>