I found this piece of code works in that i can programmatically creates a richfaces dropdown menu. But some of the code is deprecated. Can anyone tell me what to put in instead of the deprecated calls?
Thanks
public HtmlDropDownMenu getMyMenu()
{
HtmlDropDownMenu menu = new HtmlDropDownMenu();
menu.setValue( "Node Select" );
HtmlMenuItem menuItem = new HtmlMenuItem();
// TODO programmatically pass from getNodes into a String[] rather than an ArrayList of SelectItems
String subOption = "myBox";
menuItem.setValue( subOption );
Application app = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getApplication();
javax.faces.el.MethodBinding mb = app.createMethodBinding( "#{PrismBacking.onItemClick}", new Class[] { ActionEvent.class } );
menuItem.setActionListener( mb );
menu.getChildren().add( menuItem );
return( menu );
}
public void onItemClick( ActionEvent event )
{
Object obj = event.getSource();
if( obj instanceof HtmlMenuItem )
{
HtmlMenuItem item = (HtmlMenuItem)obj;
if( item != null )
{
lastItem = item.getValue().toString();
}
}
}
deprecated code lines are:
javax.faces.el.MethodBinding mb = app.createMethodBinding( "#{PrismBacking.onItemClick}", new Class[] { ActionEvent.class } );
menuItem.setActionListener( mb );
As usual, all the deprecation is indeed just described in the API docs, including details about the replacement.
To have a clear overview, here are both the pre-JSF 1.2 and post-JSF 1.2 ways to create an Action and ActionListener dynamically:
Create Action binding in JSF 1.0/1.1:
MethodBinding action = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getApplication()
.createMethodBinding("#{bean.action}", new Class[0]);
uiCommandComponent.setAction(action);
Create ActionListener binding in JSF 1.0/1.1:
MethodBinding actionListener = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getApplication()
.createMethodBinding("#{bean.actionListener}", new Class[] {ActionEvent.class});
uiCommandComponent.setActionListener(actionListener);
Create Action expression in JSF 1.2 or newer:
FacesContext context = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance();
MethodExpression action = context.getApplication().getExpressionFactory()
.createMethodExpression(context.getELContext(), "#{bean.action}", String.class, new Class[0]);
uiCommandComponent.setActionExpression(action);
Create ActionListener expression in JSF 1.2 or newer:
FacesContext context = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance();
MethodExpression actionListener = context.getApplication().getExpressionFactory()
.createMethodExpression(context.getELContext(), "#{bean.actionListener}", null, new Class[] {ActionEvent.class});
uiCommandComponent.addActionListener(new MethodExpressionActionListener(actionListener));
To avoid lot of boilerplate code, you can just wrap it nicely in helper methods (if necessary in an helper/utility class), e.g.:
public static MethodExpression createAction(String actionExpression, Class<?> returnType) {
FacesContext context = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance();
return context.getApplication().getExpressionFactory()
.createMethodExpression(context.getELContext(), actionExpression, returnType, new Class[0]);
}
public static MethodExpressionActionListener createActionListener(String actionListenerExpression) {
FacesContext context = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance();
return new MethodExpressionActionListener(context.getApplication().getExpressionFactory()
.createMethodExpression(context.getELContext(), actionListenerExpression, null, new Class[] {ActionEvent.class}));
}
so that you can just use it as follows:
uiCommandComponent.setActionExpression(createAction("#{bean.action}", String.class);
uiCommandComponent.addActionListener(createActionListener("#{bean.actionListener}");
The javadocs state it clearly:
Application.createMethodBinding
Deprecated. This has been replaced by calling getExpressionFactory() then ExpressionFactory.createMethodExpression(javax.el.ELContext, java.lang.String, java.lang.Class, java.lang.Class[]).
Here's how to use it:
MethodExpression methodExpression =
application.getExpressionFactory().createMethodExpression(
FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getELContext(),
"#{PrismBacking.onItemClick}",
null,
new Class[] { ActionEvent.class });
menuItem.setActionExpression(methodExpression);
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