Skip to content

leftieFriele/velocity-tag

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

4 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Introduction

VelocityTag is a simple abstraction of the JSP tag library that follows a "Model and View" approach to building your custom tags. Previously, writing JSP tags seemed to be a pretty archaic exercise for me as I found myself writing HTML templates into Java strings and writing them out to the page writer (Servlets circa. 1998, anyone?). VelocityTag redefines how you control the JSP tag life-cycle and will hopefully make maintaining your tag libraries easier and less prone to error.

Examples

Hello $world!

For the most trivial example, we will create a tag that greets a user. The custom tag will be used like this:

<v:hello who="World" />

First, extend ca.mrvisser.velocitytag.api.VelocityTag like so:

package ca.mrvisser.testtags;

import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Map;

import ca.mrvisser.velocitytag.api.VelocityTag;

public class HelloWorldTag extends VelocityTag {
	private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;

	private String who;
	
	@Override
	protected String getTemplateReference() {
		return "ca/mrvisser/testtags/templates/hello-world-tag.vm";
	}

	@Override
	protected Map<String, Object> buildContext() {
		Map<String, Object> context = new HashMap<String, Object>();
		context.put("who", who);
		return context;
	}

	@Override
	protected void reset() {
		who = null;
	}

	public void setWho(String who) {
		this.who = who;
	}

	public String getWho() {
		return who;
	}
}
  • getTemplateReference() must point to a velocity template located on the class-path (e.g., WEB-INF/classes/...)
  • reset() is used to clear the state of the tag after it has finished rendering. Since servlet containers may pool tag instances this is useful to clear potential memory-leaks and reset the tag state for the next execution.
  • buildContext() is responsible for building the data that will be given directly to your velocity template. You'll see in the next file how the template uses the data

Second, write a velocity template for your tag and place it in ca/mrvisser/testtags/templates/hello-world-tag.vm:

#macro(doStartTag)
	<span>Hello, $who!
#end
#macro(doEndTag)
	</span>
#end
  • doStartTag velocimacro is executed in the same manner that the doStartTag() method of a JSP custom tag would be executed, except the logic for building the model was separated into the Java class
  • $who variable was taken from the context built in buildContext()
  • doEndTag velocimacro is executed after doStartTag, similar to how JSP executes the doEndTag() method

And that's basically it. All the other JSP custom tag process apply. Such as adding the tag to your TLD file:

<tag>
	<name>hello</name>
	<tagclass>ca.mrvisser.testtags.HelloWorldTag</tagclass>
	<attribute>
		<name>who</name>
		<required>true</required>
		<rtexprvalue>true</rtexprvalue>
	<attribute>
</tag>

There is support for body tags (ca.mrvisser.velocitytag.api.VelocityBodyTag) as well as iteration (ca.mrvisser.velocitytag.api.VelocityIteratorTag).

I will post more examples and documentation in the near future. In the meantime, check out the code, the class comments provide great detail as well.

About

A Velocity-driven Model And View JSP tag library abstraction

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published