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Excerpt
hiddentrue

Using SelectModel, SelectModelFactory and ValueEncoder for Select menus populated from a database

Using Select With a List

The documentation for the Select Component and the Tapestry Tutorial provide simplistic examples of populating a drop-down menu (as the (X)HTML Select element) using comma-delimited strings and enums. However, most real-world Tapestry applications need to populate such menus using values from a database, commonly in the form of java.util.List objects. Doing so generally requires a SelectModel and a ValueEncoder bound to the Select component with its "model" and "encoder" parameters:

Code Block

<t:select t:id="colorMenu" value="selectedColor" model="ColorSelectModel" encoder="colorEncoder" />

In the above example, ColorSelectModel must be of type SelectModel, or anything that Tapestry knows how to coerce into a SelectModel, such as a List or a Map or a "value=label,value=label,..." delimited string, or anything Tapestry knows how to coerce into a List or Map, such as an Array or a comma-delimited String.

SelectModel


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    *JumpStart Demos:*
    [Total Control Object Select|https://tapestry-jumpstart.org/jumpstart/examples/select/totalcontrolobject]
    [ID Select|https://tapestry-jumpstart.org/jumpstart/examples/select/id]
    [Easy ID Select|https://tapestry-jumpstart.org/jumpstart/examples/select/easyid]
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A SelectModel is a collection of options (specifically OptionModel objects) for a drop-down menu. Basically, each option is a value (an object) and a label (presented to the user).

...

Code Block
titleSelectWithListDemo.java (a page class)

@Property
private SelectModel colorSelectModel;
@Inject
SelectModelFactory selectModelFactory;
...
void setupRender() {
    // invoke my service to find all colors, e.g. in the database
    List<Color> colors = colorService.findAll();

    // create a SelectModel from my list of colors
    colorSelectModel = selectModelFactory.create(colors, "name");
}

The resulting SelectModel has a selectable option (specifically, an OptionModel) for every object in the original List. The label property name (the "name" property, in this example) determines the user-visible text of each menu option, and your ValueEncoder's toClient() method provides the encoded value (most commonly a simple number). If you don't provide a ValueEncoder, the result of the objects' toString() method (Color.toStringColor#toString() in this example) is used. Although not a recommended practice, you could set your toString() to return the object's ID for this purpose:

Code Block
titleColor.java (partial)

...
@Override
public String toString() {
    return String.valueOf(this.getId()); 
}

...

In addition to a SelectModel, your Select menu is likely to need a ValueEncoder. While a SelectModel is concerned only with how to construct a Select menu, a ValueEncoder is used when constructing the Select menu and when interpreting the encoded value that is submitted back to the server. A ValueEncoder is a converter between the type of objects you want to represent as options in the menu and the client-side encoded values that uniquely identify them, and vice-versa.

Wiki Markup
{float:right|background=#eee|padding=0 1em}
    *JumpStart Demo:*
    [Easy Object Select|https://tapestry-jumpstart.org/jumpstart/examples/select/easyobject]
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Most commonly, your ValueEncoder's toClient() method will return a unique ID (e.g. a database primary key, or perhaps a UUID) of the given object, and its toValue() method will return the object matching the given ID by doing a database lookup (ideally using a service or DAO method).

...

Code Block
titleColorEncoder.java (perhaps in your com.example.myappname.encoders package)

public class ColorEncoder implements ValueEncoder<Color>, ValueEncoderFactory<Color> { 

    @Inject
    private ColorService colorService;

    @Override
    public String toClient(Color value) {
        // return the given object's ID
        return String.valueOf(value.getId()); 
    }

    @Override
    public Color toValue(String id) { 
        // find the color object of the given ID in the database
        return colorService.findById(Long.parseLong(id)); 
    }

    // let this ValueEncoder also serve as a ValueEncoderFactory
    @Override
    public ValueEncoder<Color> create(Class<Color> type) {
        return this; 
    }
} 

...

Code Block
titleSelectWithListDemo.java (a page class, partial)

    . . .

    public ValueEncoder<Color> getColorEncoder() {

        return new ValueEncoder<Color>() {

            @Override
            public String toClient(Color value) {
                // return the given object's ID
                return String.valueOf(value.getId()); 
            }

            @Override
            public Color toValue(String id) { 
                // find the color object of the given ID in the database
                return colorService.findById(Long.parseLong(id)); 
            }
        }; 
    }

...

Code Block
titleAppModule.java (partial)

...
    public static void contributeValueEncoderSource(MappedConfiguration<Class<Color>,
                        ValueEncoderFactory<Color>> configuration) { 
        configuration.addInstance(Color.class, ColorEncoder.class);
    }

...

Code Block
titleAppModule.java (partial)

...
    public static void contributeValueEncoderSource(MappedConfiguration<Class,
                        ValueEncoderFactory> configuration)
    {
        configuration.addInstance(Color.class, ColorEncoder.class);
        configuration.addInstance(SomeOtherType.class, SomeOtherTypeEncoder.class);
    }

...

The Select component's "encoder" parameter is optional, but if the "value" parameter is bound to a complex object (not a simple String, Integer, etc.) and you don't provide a ValueEncoder with the "encoder" parameter (and one isn't provided automatically by, for example, the Tapestry Hibernate integration), you'll receive a "Could not find a coercion" exception (when you submit the form) as Tapestry tries to convert the selected option's encoded value back to the object in your Select's "value" parameter. To fix this, you'll either have to 1) provide a ValueEncoder, 2) provide a Coercion, or 3) use a simple value (String, Integer, etc.) for your Select's "value" parameter, and then you'll have to add logic in the corresponding onSuccess event listener method:

Code Block
titleSelectWithListDemo.tml (partial)

<t:select t:id="colorMenu" value="selectedColorId" model="ColorSelectModel" />

...

Code Block
titleSelectWithListDemo.java (partial)

...
    public void onSuccessFromMyForm() {
        // look up the color object from the ID selected
    	selectedColor = colorService.findById(selectedColorId);
    	...
    }

...

Actually, it's really pretty easy if you follow the examples above. But why is Tapestry designed to use SelectModels and ValueEncoders anyway? Well, in short, this design allows you to avoid storing (via @Persist, @SessionAttribute or @SessionState) the entire (potentially large) list of objects in the session or rebuilding the whole list of objects again (though only one is needed) when the form is submitted. The chief benefits are reduced memory use and more scalable clustering due to having far less HTTP session data to replicate across the nodes of a cluster.