Building Stateless UI
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Revision as of 10:33, 22 November 2023 by Hawk (talk | contribs) (→Handling Events and Accessing UI State in a Stateless Manner)
Setting up
To set up stateless components in a ZK 10 application, you need to include the stateless components module and define a Dispatcher Richlet Filter in your `WEB-INF/web.xml` file.
Including Required Jar
dependencies {
implementation "org.zkoss.zk:stateless:${zkVersion}"
...
}
Dispatcher Richlet Filter
<filter>
<filter-name>DispatcherRichletFilter</filter-name>
<filter-class>org.zkoss.stateless.ui.http.DispatcherRichletFilter</filter-class>
<init-param>
<param-name>basePackages</param-name>
<param-value><!-- your base packages --></param-value>
</init-param>
</filter>
<filter-mapping>
<filter-name>DispatcherRichletFilter</filter-name>
<url-pattern>/*</url-pattern>
</filter-mapping>
Constructing UI with IComponent
Stateless components in ZK 10 are immutable and are created using Java APIs. Here is an example of how to compose a UI with IComponent.
// Example of composing UI with IComponent
public IComponent demo() {
return IButton.of("add items").withSclass("add-items");
}
Handling Events and Accessing UI State in a Stateless Manner
Events in stateless components are wired using the `@Action` annotation, and the UI state is accessed via the `@ActionVariable`.
// Wiring an event listener
@Action(type = Events.ON_CLICK) // Wiring event
public void addItem() {
...
}
// Accessing UI state
@Action(type = Events.ON_CLICK)
public void addItem(@ActionVariable(targetId = ActionTarget.SELF, field = "id") String orderId) {
...
}