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SPRING COOKBOOK

You're reading from   SPRING COOKBOOK Over 100 hands-on recipes to build Spring web applications easily and efficiently

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783985807
Length 234 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Murat Yilmaz Murat Yilmaz
Author Profile Icon Murat Yilmaz
Murat Yilmaz
Jerome Jaglale Jerome Jaglale
Author Profile Icon Jerome Jaglale
Jerome Jaglale
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Creating a Spring Application FREE CHAPTER 2. Defining Beans and Using Dependency Injection 3. Using Controllers and Views 4. Querying a Database 5. Using Forms 6. Managing Security 7. Unit Testing 8. Running Batch Jobs 9. Handling Mobiles and Tablets 10. Connecting to Facebook and Twitter 11. Using the Java RMI, HTTP Invoker, Hessian, and REST 12. Using Aspect-oriented Programming Index

Using a checkbox


In this recipe, you will learn how to display a checkbox and, when the form is submitted, retrieve its state (selected or not) in a controller method.

How to do it…

Use the form:checkbox element in the JSP and a boolean attribute to store its value when the form is submitted:

  1. If a default value is necessary, use a boolean attribute of the default object (refer to the Setting a form's default values using a model object recipe):

    user.setMarried(false);
  2. In the JSP, use the form:checkbox element:

    <form:checkbox path="married" />
  3. In the controller that processes the form submission, make sure that the @ModelAttribute object has a corresponding boolean attribute:

    public class User {
      private boolean married;
    ...

How it works…

This is the generated HTML code:

<input id="married1" name="married" type="checkbox" value="true"/>
<input type="hidden" name="_married" value="on"/>

If the checkbox is checked, married=true is sent when the form is submitted. If it's not checked...

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