init
Syntax:
<?init class="..." [arg0="..."] [arg1="..."] [arg2="..."] [arg3="..."]?> <?init zscript="..."?>
It defines an initiator that will be instantiated and called when the ZUML document is loaded.
There are two formats. The first format is to specify a class that is used to do the application-specific initialization. The second format is to specify a zscript file to do the application-specific initialization.
The initialization takes place before the page is evaluated and attached to a desktop. Thus, the getDesktop, getId and getTitle method will return null, when initializing. To retrieve the current desktop, you could use Execution.
You could specify any number of the init directive. The specified class must implement the Initiator interface.
<?init class="MyInit1"?>
<?init class="MyInit2"?>
Since 3.6.2, you can use any (readable) name instead of arg0 and so on. For example,
<?init class="org.zkoss.zkplus.databind.AnnotateDataBinderInit" root="./abc"?>
Then, Initiator.doInit(Page, Map) will be called with a map, which contains an entry, whose name is root
and value ./abc
.
If you'd like to apply an initiator for every page, you don't need to specify it on every page. Rather, you could install a system-level initiator. For more information, please refer to ZK Developer's Reference: System-level Initiators.
class
[Optional]
A class name that must implement the Initiator interface. Unlike the init directive, the class name cannot be the class that is defined in zscript codes.
An instance of the specified class is constructed and its doInit method is called in the Page Initial phase (i.e., before the page is evaluated). The doFinally method is called after the page has been evaluated. The doCatch method is called if an exception occurs during the evaluation.
Thus, you could also use it for cleanup and error handling.
zscript
[Optional]
A script file that will be evaluated in the Page Initial phase.
arg0, arg1...
[Optional]
You could specify any number of arguments. It will be passed to the doInit method if the first format is used. Since 3.6.2, you can use any name for the arguments, but, in the prior version, the first argument must be named as arg0, the second is arg1 and so on.
Version History
Version | Date | Content |
---|---|---|