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PrimeFaces Beginner's Guide

You're reading from   PrimeFaces Beginner's Guide The perfect introduction to PrimeFaces, this tutorial will take you step by step through all the great features, ranging from form-creation to sophisticated navigation systems. All you need are some basic JSF and jQuery skills.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783280698
Length 378 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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K. Siva Prasad Reddy K. Siva Prasad Reddy
Author Profile Icon K. Siva Prasad Reddy
K. Siva Prasad Reddy
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to PrimeFaces FREE CHAPTER 2. Introducing Sample Application TechBuzz 3. Using PrimeFaces Common Utility Components 4. Introducing the PrimeFaces Client Side Validation Framework 5. Introducing Text Input Components 6. Working with Selection Input Components 7. Introducing Advanced Input Components 8. Working with Data Components 9. Introducing Advanced Data Visualization Components 10. Working with Layout Components 11. Introducing Navigation Components 12. Drawing Charts 13. Using PrimeFaces Themes Index

Understanding partial page rendering (PPR)

PrimeFaces provides a generic partial page rendering (PPR) mechanism to update specific JSF components with AJAX.

PrimeFaces provides process, update attributes to indicate which view components need to be processed or updated. Partial processing also provides some keywords which has some special meaning.

Keyword

Description

@this

Component that triggers the PPR is processed.

@parent

Parent of the PPR trigger is processed.

@form

Encapsulating form of the PPR trigger is processed.

@namingcontainer

Encapsulating naming container.

@none

No component is processed, useful to revert changes to form.

@all

Whole component tree is processed just like a regular request.

Sometimes, we may need to process the form partially based on the action triggered on the form. A very common scenario is, there can be multiple submit buttons in a form and you need to perform validations based on the action performed and ignore other field validations that are irrelevant to the action invoked.

For example, assume we are viewing a User Detail Form and we can update the user details or delete the user record using Update and Delete submit buttons. For updating, the user fields, userId, userName, and firstName are mandatory where as for deleting, only userId is required. So, when the Update button is clicked, validations should be performed on userId, userName, and firstName fields. But when the Delete button is clicked, validations on userName and firstName should be skipped.

You have been reading a chapter from
PrimeFaces Beginner's Guide
Published in: Nov 2013
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781783280698
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