Tell me more ×
Facebook - Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for facebook developers. It's 100% free, no registration required.
Facebook and Stack Exchange are now working together to support the Facebook developer community. Facebook engineers participate here along with the best Facebook developers in the world. If you have a technical question about Facebook, this is the best place to ask.

I'm using the Spring Form library to handle a search page in my application. Here is a snipped from my DD showing the bean configuration:

<bean name="/search.html" class="myapp.web.AccountSearchController">
        <property name="sessionForm" value="true"/>
        <property name="commandName" value="searchAccounts"/>
        <property name="commandClass" value="myapp.service.AccountSearch"/>
        <property name="validator">
            <bean class="myapp.service.AccountSearchValidator"/>
        </property>
        <property name="formView" value="accountSearch"/>
        <property name="successView" value="accountSearch"/>
    </bean>

The validator class is quite simple:

package myapp.service;

import org.springframework.validation.Validator;
import org.springframework.validation.Errors;

import org.apache.commons.logging.Log;
import org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory;

public class AccountSearchValidator implements Validator {

    /** Logger for this class and subclasses */
    protected final Log logger = LogFactory.getLog(getClass());

    public boolean supports(Class clazz) {
        return AccountSearch.class.equals(clazz);
    }

    public void validate(Object obj, Errors errors) {
        AccountSearch accountSearch = (AccountSearch) obj;
        if (accountSearch == null) {
            errors.rejectValue("domainName", "error.accountSearch.neither-specified", null, "Value required.");
        } else if (accountSearch.getAccountId().isEmpty() && 
            	   accountSearch.getDomainName().isEmpty() ) {
            errors.rejectValue("domainName", "error.accountSearch.neither-specified", null, "Value required.");
        }
    }
}

In my JSP, my form is displayed in an HTML table. I want field specific errors to be displayed under the respective field as a separate table row. Here's a snippet:

            <tr>
    			<td align="right" valign="top"><form:label path="domainName">Domain Name</form:label>:</td>
    			<td><form:input path="domainName" size="30"/></td>
    		</tr>
    		<tr>
    		     <td>&nbsp;</td>
    		     <td><form:errors path="domainName" cssClass="error"/></td>
    		</tr>

The question I have is - how can I make the output of the error row conditional on the existence of the error? Is the Validator instance accessible from my JSP? What would the test be for a c:if tag?

Thanks,

-aj

share|improve this question

3 Answers

up vote 15 down vote accepted

OK it took me a few days but I figured it out:

    <c:set var="domainNameErrors"><form:errors path="domainName"/></c:set>
    <c:if test="${not empty domainNameErrors}">
		<tr>
		     <td>&nbsp;</td>
		     <td>${domainNameErrors}</td>
		</tr>
    </c:if>

This article was very helpful: http://forum.springsource.org/archive/index.php/t-51044.html

share|improve this answer

Use <spring:hasBindErrors name="loginPasswordForm">

share|improve this answer

I think this article describes what you need in good details

share|improve this answer
Hi, Thanks for your comment but I don't see where in the link you provided that they are using the Spring Form library. If you have any info specific to Spring Form, please post another answer. Thanks! – AJ. Oct 31 '09 at 14:26

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.