I have created form and I want to show previous existing items on a table while a new one is creating. I'd like to show matching items as form is filling up. But when I try to filter the list without having the form completed, the validation messages appear and the table doesn't get updated.
Don't know if it's possible, but what I want to do something like this:
<h:form id="form">
<h:outputText value="Name: "/>
<p:inputText value="#{itemsBean.name}" id="name" required="true"/>
<br/>
<h:outputText value="Description: "/>
<p:inputText value="#{itemsBean.description}" id="description" required="true"/>
<p:commandButton value="Save" update="form" actionListener="#{itemsBean.save}"/> //validate and save
<p:commandButton value="Filter" update="form" actionListener="#{itemsBean.updateItemsList}"/> //don't validate, and update the table.
<p:dataTable id="list" value="#{itemsBean.itemsList}" var="item">
<p:column>
<h:outputText value="#{item.name}"/>
</p:column>
<p:column>
<h:outputText value="#{item.description}"/>
</p:column>
</p:dataTable>
</h:form>
I'm very new to JSF.
Additionally to the BalusC answer (very useful and complete) I want to add that when you use a
<h:commandButton />
it will validate (required, custom validations) all the fields in the<h:form />
where the command button is located, therefore when you need to use more than one command button you could consider that it is a good practice to use different<h:form />
to different responsibilities to avoid unexpected behavior in submit actions of the command buttons. It is well explained in a BalusC answer: Multiple h:form in a JSF PageIf your form has validations and you do not update the
<h:form />
or you do not show messages, you could get a headache thinking that the<h:commandButton />
is not firing your action, but likely is a validation problem that has not been shown.I understand that you want to filter based on the
name
input field. The<p:commandButton>
sends by default an ajax request and has aprocess
attribute wherein you can specify which components you'd like to process during the submit. In your particular case, you should then process only thename
input field and the current button (so that its action will be invoked).The
process
attribute can take a space separated collection of (relative) client IDs of the components, wherein@this
refers to the current component. It defaults in case of<p:commandButton>
to@form
(which covers all input fields of the current form and the pressed button), that's why they were all been validated in your initial attempt. In the above example, all other input fields won't be processed (and thus also not validated).If you however intend to skip the
required
validation for all fields whenever the button in question is been pressed, so that you can eventually process multiple fields which doesn't necessarily need to be all filled in, then you need to make therequired="true"
a conditional instead which checks if the button is been pressed or not. For example, let it evaluatetrue
only when the save button has been pressed:This way it won't be validated as
required="true"
when a different button is pressed. The trick in the above example is that the name of the pressed button (which is essentially the client ID) is been sent as request parameter and that you could just check its presence in the request parameter map.See also:
Change your filter commandbutton like this to ignore validation:
EDIT:
The related post on SO, I think this will solve your issue too
JSF 2.0: How to skip JSR-303 bean validation?
I Have tested this with non-ajax submits:
The first input is required validated only on Save1 button submit.