The producermethods Example: Using a Producer Method To Choose a Bean Implementation (original) (raw)
2. Using the Tutorial Examples
3. Getting Started with Web Applications
4. JavaServer Faces Technology
7. Using JavaServer Faces Technology in Web Pages
8. Using Converters, Listeners, and Validators
9. Developing with JavaServer Faces Technology
10. JavaServer Faces Technology: Advanced Concepts
11. Using Ajax with JavaServer Faces Technology
12. Composite Components: Advanced Topics and Example
13. Creating Custom UI Components and Other Custom Objects
14. Configuring JavaServer Faces Applications
16. Uploading Files with Java Servlet Technology
17. Internationalizing and Localizing Web Applications
18. Introduction to Web Services
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21. JAX-RS: Advanced Topics and Example
23. Getting Started with Enterprise Beans
24. Running the Enterprise Bean Examples
25. A Message-Driven Bean Example
26. Using the Embedded Enterprise Bean Container
27. Using Asynchronous Method Invocation in Session Beans
Part V Contexts and Dependency Injection for the Java EE Platform
28. Introduction to Contexts and Dependency Injection for the Java EE Platform
29. Running the Basic Contexts and Dependency Injection Examples
30. Contexts and Dependency Injection for the Java EE Platform: Advanced Topics
31. Running the Advanced Contexts and Dependency Injection Examples
The encoder Example: Using Alternatives
The Coder Interface and Implementations
The encoder Facelets Page and Managed Bean
To Build, Package, and Deploy the encoder Example Using NetBeans IDE
To Run the encoder Example Using NetBeans IDE
To Build, Package, and Deploy the encoder Example Using Ant
To Run the encoder Example Using Ant
The producerfields Example: Using Producer Fields to Generate Resources
The Producer Field for the producerfields Example
The producerfields Entity and Session Bean
The producerfields Facelets Pages and Managed Bean
Running the producerfields Example
To Build, Package, and Deploy the producerfields Example Using NetBeans IDE
To Build, Package, and Deploy the producerfields Example Using Ant
To Run the producerfields Example
The billpayment Example: Using Events and Interceptors
The PaymentHandler Event Listener
The billpayment Facelets Pages and Managed Bean
The LoggedInterceptor Interceptor Class
Running the billpayment Example
To Build, Package, and Deploy the billpayment Example Using NetBeans IDE
To Build, Package, and Deploy the billpayment Example Using Ant
To Run the billpayment Example
The decorators Example: Decorating a Bean
Components of the decorators Example
Running the decorators Example
To Build, Package, and Deploy the decorators Example Using NetBeans IDE
To Build, Package, and Deploy the decorators Example Using Ant
32. Introduction to the Java Persistence API
33. Running the Persistence Examples
34. The Java Persistence Query Language
35. Using the Criteria API to Create Queries
36. Creating and Using String-Based Criteria Queries
37. Controlling Concurrent Access to Entity Data with Locking
38. Using a Second-Level Cache with Java Persistence API Applications
39. Introduction to Security in the Java EE Platform
40. Getting Started Securing Web Applications
41. Getting Started Securing Enterprise Applications
42. Java EE Security: Advanced Topics
Part VIII Java EE Supporting Technologies
43. Introduction to Java EE Supporting Technologies
45. Resources and Resource Adapters
46. The Resource Adapter Example
47. Java Message Service Concepts
48. Java Message Service Examples
49. Bean Validation: Advanced Topics
50. Using Java EE Interceptors
51. Duke's Bookstore Case Study Example
52. Duke's Tutoring Case Study Example
53. Duke's Forest Case Study Example
The producermethods example shows how to use a producer method to choose between two beans at runtime, as described in Using Producer Methods, Producer Fields, and Disposer Methods in CDI Applications. It is very similar to the encoder example described in The encoder Example: Using Alternatives. The example includes the same interface and two implementations of it, a managed bean, a Facelets page, and configuration files. It also contains a qualifier type. When you run it, you do not need to edit the beans.xml file and redeploy the application to change its behavior.
Components of the producermethods Example
The components of producermethods are very much like those for encoder, with some significant differences.
Neither implementation of the Coder bean is annotated @Alternative, and the beans.xml file does not contain an alternatives element.
The Facelets page and the managed bean, CoderBean, have an additional property, coderType, that allows the user to specify at runtime which implementation to use. In addition, the managed bean has a producer method that selects the implementation using a qualifier type, @Chosen.
The bean declares two constants that specify whether the coder type is the test implementation or the implementation that actually shifts letters:
private final static int TEST = 1;
private final static int SHIFT = 2;
private int coderType = SHIFT; // default value
The producer method, annotated with @Produces and @Chosen as well as @RequestScoped(so that it lasts only for the duration of a single request and response), takes both implementations as arguments, then returns one or the other, based on the coderType supplied by the user.
@Produces
@Chosen
@RequestScoped
public Coder getCoder(@New TestCoderImpl tci,
@New CoderImpl ci) {
switch (coderType) {
case TEST:
return tci;
case SHIFT:
return ci;
default:
return null;
}
}
Finally, the managed bean injects the chosen implementation, specifying the same qualifier as that returned by the producer method to resolve ambiguities:
@Inject
@Chosen
@RequestScoped
Coder coder;
The Facelets page contains modified instructions and a pair of radio buttons whose selected value is assigned to the property coderBean.coderType:
<h2>String Encoder</h2>
<p>Select Test or Shift, type a string and an integer, then click
Encode.</p>
<p>If you select Test, the TestCoderImpl bean will display the
argument values.</p>
<p>If you select Shift, the CoderImpl bean will return a string that
shifts the letters in the original string by the value you specify.
The value must be between 0 and 26.</p>
<h:form id="encodeit">
<h:selectOneRadio id="coderType"
required="true"
value="#{coderBean.coderType}">
<f:selectItem
itemValue="1"
itemLabel="Test"/>
<f:selectItem
itemValue="2"
itemLabel="Shift Letters"/>
</h:selectOneRadio>
...
Running the producermethods Example
You can use either NetBeans IDE or Ant to build, package, deploy, and run the producermethods application.
To Build, Package, and Deploy the producermethods Example Using NetBeans IDE
- From the File menu, choose Open Project.
- In the Open Project dialog, navigate to:
tut-install/examples/cdi/ - Select the producermethods folder.
- Select the Open as Main Project check box.
- Click Open Project.
- In the Projects tab, right-click the producermethods project and select Deploy.
To Build, Package, and Deploy the producermethods Example Using Ant
- In a terminal window, go to:
tut-install/examples/cdi/producermethods/ - Type the following command:
ant
This command calls the default target, which builds and packages the application into a WAR file, producermethods.war, located in the dist directory. - Type the following command:
ant deploy
To Run the producermethods Example
- In a web browser, type the following URL:
http://localhost:8080/producermethods
The String Encoder page opens. - Select either the Test or Shift Letters radio button, type a string and the number of letters to shift by, then click Encode.
Depending on your selection, the Result line displays either the encoded string or the input values you specified.
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