This mini tutorial shows you how to call Wicket from Javascript. It is based on an e-mail from Michael Sparer.
Setting up the Wicket response to the JavaScript call
Add the AbstractDefaultAjaxBehavior to the component you'd like to call from javascript. You then have to override the respond method of AbstractDefaultAjaxBehavior to perform your actions and to append your changes to the response
For example in your panel:
final AbstractDefaultAjaxBehavior behave = new AbstractDefaultAjaxBehavior() { protected void respond(final AjaxRequestTarget target) { target.add(new Label("foo", "Yeah I was just called from Javascript!")); } }; add(behave);
Invoking JavaScript from your Java Wicket component
Any component can add Javascript to the page header by implementing IHeaderContributor, that's where the
response-object gets passed.
TODO: add an example of Java code.
Alternatively, you can add a Wicket label containing JavaScript to your page:
<script type="text/javascript" wicket:id="myScript">/* script will be rendered here */</script>
Label myScript = new Label("myScript", "callWicket();"); myScript.setEscapeModelStrings(false); // do not HTML escape JavaScript code add(myScript);
Calling your Java Wicket component from JavaScript
If you add any class that extends AbstractDefaultAjaxBehavior to your page, wicket-ajax.js will be added to the header ofyour web page. wicket-ajax.js provides you with two basic methods to call your component:
function wicketAjaxGet(url, successHandler, failureHandler, precondition, channel)
and
function wicketAjaxPost(url, body, successHandler, failureHandler, precondition, channel)
Don't POST without POST content
Note that some web servers gulp on HTTP POST requests with no POST content (in other words: "wicketAjaxPost($URL);" is evil).
This is due to some browsers (Firefox, ...) not sending the mandatory header "content-length" when the POST body is empty.
Jetty is generous in this case, while Tomcat might respond with an HTTP 411 error code.
So if you have to use HTTP POST requests, then make sure that at least a dummy JavaScript object is added as POST data.
Here is an example:
function callWicket() { var wcall = wicketAjaxGet('$url$' + '$args$', function() { }, function() { }); }
'$url$' is obtained from the method behave.getCallbackUrl()
. If you paste the String returned from that method into your browser, you'll invoke the respond method, the same applies for the javascript method.
You can optionally add arguments by appending these to the URL string. They take the form &foo=bar
.
Obtaining the GET/POST arguments on the server side
Ok, this is actually quite ugly, but you get the optional arguments in the response method like this:
Map map = ((WebRequestCycle) RequestCycle.get()).getRequest().getParameterMap();
Alternatively, you can retrieve a single parameter by its key:
String paramFoo = RequestCycle.get().getRequest().getParameter("foo");