@global-command
From Documentation
Syntax
@global-command( [EL-expression], [arbitraryKey]=[EL-expression] )
Description
Target Attribute: event attributes (e.g. onClick, onOK)
Purpose: Specify which global command to execute when the event fires
If you use this binding with a local command binding, remember that local command is always executed first.
You can pass arbitrary arguments in key-value pairs with comma separated.
- [arbitraryKey]=[EL-expression]
- It's key-value pairs basically. You can write multiple key-value pairs with different key names.
- An EL expression without key is set to a default key named "value" implicitly.
- Due to each annotation has different functions, some annotations may ignore key-value pair expression other than default key, e.g.@id.
- [arbitraryKey]
- It could be any name, it's used as a key for parameter related Java annotation in a ViewModel.
Example
<button label="Save" onClick="@command('saveOrder') @global-command('refresh')" />
<button label="ShowAll" onClick="@global-command('show')" />
<button label="Index" onClick="@command('showIndex') @global-command('showIndex', index=10, keyword='myKeyword')"/>
Version History
Version | Date | Content |
---|---|---|
6.0.0 | February 2012 | The MVVM was introduced. |