RE: How to fail validation if ListMultipleChoice is empty

2011-05-02 Thread Coleman, Chris
That was my plan exactly but I didn't know of a way to tell which button was 
doing the form submission until now!

Thanks for that Form#findSubmittingButton works beautifully!

I don't even think it's a hack as that validation should only really a problem 
if the user is submitting the form, not when they are merely adding items to 
the list.

We are using models for the storage of which items are in the list when the 
user clicks OK.
We are also using models to keep track of which items the user has selected 
(multiple selection is turned on).

The form is a classic 'tranfer' setup - with 2 list boxes and 2 buttons 
add/remove. The user can transfer items from one list to the other.

-Original Message-
From: Clint Checketts [mailto:checke...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Monday, 2 May 2011 3:40 PM
To: users@wicket.apache.org
Subject: Re: How to fail validation if ListMultipleChoice is empty

Good catch on AjaxSubmitButton being deprecated, I guess an IDe would have
made that obvious ;)

I do have to say using the getChoices over a proper model may give you more
work than needed in updating the underlying model objects (maybe consider
overriding the getConvertedInput to return getChoices)

It sounds like you have different buttons for adding and submitting. Correct
me if this is too hackish, but you could change the validator to check if
the addBtn is the submitting button, and ignore the validation in that case:

  form.add(new AbstractFormValidator()
  {
public FormComponent[] getDependentFormComponents()
{
  return null;
}

public void validate(Form? form)
{
  List sets = targettedSetsList.getChoices();

  if ((*!addBtn.equals(form.findSubmittingButton()) * sets.size() == 0
) {
targettedSetsList.error((IValidationError)new
  ValidationError().addMessageKey(error.noSetSpecified));
  }
}
  });


-Clint

On Mon, May 2, 2011 at 12:27 AM, Coleman, Chris 
chris.cole...@thalesgroup.com.au wrote:

 According to the doco the default form processing behavior is executed for
 AjaxButton and AjaxSubmitButton (in fact AjaxSubmitButton appears to be
 deprecated - behaves the same as AjaxButton anyway?).

 I am using AjaxButton.

 I actually don't care about the selections but rather, the entries that the
 user has added to the list (whether selected or not) which is why I call
 getChoices() rather than getConvertedInput()

 The button code is:

  AjaxButton addBtn = new AjaxButton(add) {
@Override
protected void onSubmit(AjaxRequestTarget target, Form form) {
  update(target, selectedAvailableSets, availableSetsList,
 targettedSetsList);
}

@Override
protected void onError(AjaxRequestTarget target, Form form) {
}
  };

  addBtn.setOutputMarkupId(true);

  add(addBtn);


 -Original Message-
 From: Clint Checketts [mailto:checke...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Monday, 2 May 2011 2:28 PM
 To: users@wicket.apache.org
 Subject: Re: How to fail validation if ListMultipleChoice is empty

 You are correct that the Form's validation should only fire when submitting
 the form. When an individual element is updated via ajax (as in an
 AjaxFormComponentUpdatingBehavior) then just the processing and validations
 steps are fired for the individual form component.

 It makes me wonder if you are using an AjaxSubmitButton instead of just an
 AjaxButton. (Or similarly an AjaxSubmitLink instead of an  AjaxLink) Mind
 including your button's code?

 Also, why are you calling getChoices() instead of getConvertedInput() in
 the
 validator? Choices represent the possible selection options, the converted
 input is the value of the selected choices.

 -Clint

 On Sun, May 1, 2011 at 9:25 PM, Coleman, Chris 
 chris.cole...@thalesgroup.com.au wrote:

  Yes, it's all via AJAX.
 
  In the last few minutes I've tried a different approach and it works ok
 but
  it introduces another problem:
 
   form.add(new AbstractFormValidator()
   {
 public FormComponent[] getDependentFormComponents()
 {
   return null;
 }
 
 public void validate(Form? form)
 {
   List sets = targettedSetsList.getChoices();
 
   if ( sets.size() == 0 ) {
 targettedSetsList.error((IValidationError)new
  ValidationError().addMessageKey(error.noSetSpecified));
   }
 }
   });
 
  This accurately detects when nothing is in the list and displays an error
  message but once emptied we can not add new elements to the list because
 the
  validation is also executed when the 'add' button is pressed. The
 validation
  fails because the list is empty so the 'add' fails, making it impossible
 to
  add new elements when the list is empty.
 
  I thought validation would only occur when the user submits the form but
 it
  appears to be fired off whenever the user presses the 'add' button. Is
 this
  to be expected?
 
 
  -Original Message-
  From: Clint Checketts [mailto:checke...@gmail.com]
  Sent: Monday, 2 May 2011 12:10 PM
  To: users@wicket.apache.org
  

Re: How to fail validation if ListMultipleChoice is empty

2011-05-01 Thread Clint Checketts
Lets see the code about 'adding elements by pressing on a button'.  The
'getValue()' method is returning the value from the list box's HTTP
submitted values, if the add button is submitting values via ajax or some
other means then it may need a different approach.

-Clint

On Sun, May 1, 2011 at 8:15 PM, Coleman, Chris 
chris.cole...@thalesgroup.com.au wrote:

 We have an app that allows people to add elements to a ListMultipleChoice
 by pressing on a button. We want the form to fail validation if the
 ListMultipleChoice contains no elements.

 I've tried this:

  targettedSetsList.add(new IValidator()
  {
public void validate(IValidatable validatable) {
  // Always contains no items - strange
  Collection list = (Collection)validatable.getValue();

  if ( list.size() == 0 ) {
ValidationError ve = new ValidationError();
ve.setMessage(No sets have been specified for deployment);
validatable.error(ve);
  }
}
  });

 but at validation the list.size() is always 0 even if the user has added
 elements. Am I doing it the right way? Is there a better way?




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 material or information that is subject to legal professional privilege.
 They are for
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 disclosure,
 copying, alteration, storage or distribution of, or reliance on, this
 message is
 strictly prohibited. No part may be reproduced, adapted or transmitted
 without the
 written permission of the owner. If you have received this transmission in
 error, or
 are not an authorised recipient, please immediately notify the sender by
 return email,
 delete this message and all copies from your e-mail system, and destroy any
 printed
 copies. Receipt by anyone other than the intended recipient should not be
 deemed a
 waiver of any privilege or protection. Thales Australia does not warrant or
 represent
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 attached are
 error or virus free.

 --




RE: How to fail validation if ListMultipleChoice is empty

2011-05-01 Thread Coleman, Chris
Yes, it's all via AJAX.

In the last few minutes I've tried a different approach and it works ok but it 
introduces another problem:

  form.add(new AbstractFormValidator()
  {
public FormComponent[] getDependentFormComponents()
{
  return null;
}

public void validate(Form? form)
{
  List sets = targettedSetsList.getChoices();

  if ( sets.size() == 0 ) {
targettedSetsList.error((IValidationError)new 
ValidationError().addMessageKey(error.noSetSpecified));
  }  
}
  });

This accurately detects when nothing is in the list and displays an error 
message but once emptied we can not add new elements to the list because the 
validation is also executed when the 'add' button is pressed. The validation 
fails because the list is empty so the 'add' fails, making it impossible to add 
new elements when the list is empty.

I thought validation would only occur when the user submits the form but it 
appears to be fired off whenever the user presses the 'add' button. Is this to 
be expected?


-Original Message-
From: Clint Checketts [mailto:checke...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Monday, 2 May 2011 12:10 PM
To: users@wicket.apache.org
Subject: Re: How to fail validation if ListMultipleChoice is empty

Lets see the code about 'adding elements by pressing on a button'.  The
'getValue()' method is returning the value from the list box's HTTP
submitted values, if the add button is submitting values via ajax or some
other means then it may need a different approach.

-Clint

On Sun, May 1, 2011 at 8:15 PM, Coleman, Chris 
chris.cole...@thalesgroup.com.au wrote:

 We have an app that allows people to add elements to a ListMultipleChoice
 by pressing on a button. We want the form to fail validation if the
 ListMultipleChoice contains no elements.

 I've tried this:

  targettedSetsList.add(new IValidator()
  {
public void validate(IValidatable validatable) {
  // Always contains no items - strange
  Collection list = (Collection)validatable.getValue();

  if ( list.size() == 0 ) {
ValidationError ve = new ValidationError();
ve.setMessage(No sets have been specified for deployment);
validatable.error(ve);
  }
}
  });

 but at validation the list.size() is always 0 even if the user has added
 elements. Am I doing it the right way? Is there a better way?




 DISCLAIMER:---
 This e-mail transmission and any documents, files and previous e-mail
 messages
 attached to it are private and confidential. They may contain proprietary
 or copyright
 material or information that is subject to legal professional privilege.
 They are for
 the use of the intended recipient only.  Any unauthorised viewing, use,
 disclosure,
 copying, alteration, storage or distribution of, or reliance on, this
 message is
 strictly prohibited. No part may be reproduced, adapted or transmitted
 without the
 written permission of the owner. If you have received this transmission in
 error, or
 are not an authorised recipient, please immediately notify the sender by
 return email,
 delete this message and all copies from your e-mail system, and destroy any
 printed
 copies. Receipt by anyone other than the intended recipient should not be
 deemed a
 waiver of any privilege or protection. Thales Australia does not warrant or
 represent
 that this e-mail or any documents, files and previous e-mail messages
 attached are
 error or virus free.

 --





DISCLAIMER:---
This e-mail transmission and any documents, files and previous e-mail messages
attached to it are private and confidential. They may contain proprietary or 
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material or information that is subject to legal professional privilege. They 
are for
the use of the intended recipient only.  Any unauthorised viewing, use, 
disclosure,
copying, alteration, storage or distribution of, or reliance on, this message is
strictly prohibited. No part may be reproduced, adapted or transmitted without 
the
written permission of the owner. If you have received this transmission in 
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delete this message and all copies from your e-mail system, and destroy any 
printed
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that this e-mail or any documents, files and previous e-mail messages attached 
are
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Re: How to fail validation if ListMultipleChoice is empty

2011-05-01 Thread Clint Checketts
You are correct that the Form's validation should only fire when submitting
the form. When an individual element is updated via ajax (as in an
AjaxFormComponentUpdatingBehavior) then just the processing and validations
steps are fired for the individual form component.

It makes me wonder if you are using an AjaxSubmitButton instead of just an
AjaxButton. (Or similarly an AjaxSubmitLink instead of an  AjaxLink) Mind
including your button's code?

Also, why are you calling getChoices() instead of getConvertedInput() in the
validator? Choices represent the possible selection options, the converted
input is the value of the selected choices.

-Clint

On Sun, May 1, 2011 at 9:25 PM, Coleman, Chris 
chris.cole...@thalesgroup.com.au wrote:

 Yes, it's all via AJAX.

 In the last few minutes I've tried a different approach and it works ok but
 it introduces another problem:

  form.add(new AbstractFormValidator()
  {
public FormComponent[] getDependentFormComponents()
{
  return null;
}

public void validate(Form? form)
{
  List sets = targettedSetsList.getChoices();

  if ( sets.size() == 0 ) {
targettedSetsList.error((IValidationError)new
 ValidationError().addMessageKey(error.noSetSpecified));
  }
}
  });

 This accurately detects when nothing is in the list and displays an error
 message but once emptied we can not add new elements to the list because the
 validation is also executed when the 'add' button is pressed. The validation
 fails because the list is empty so the 'add' fails, making it impossible to
 add new elements when the list is empty.

 I thought validation would only occur when the user submits the form but it
 appears to be fired off whenever the user presses the 'add' button. Is this
 to be expected?


 -Original Message-
 From: Clint Checketts [mailto:checke...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Monday, 2 May 2011 12:10 PM
 To: users@wicket.apache.org
 Subject: Re: How to fail validation if ListMultipleChoice is empty

 Lets see the code about 'adding elements by pressing on a button'.  The
 'getValue()' method is returning the value from the list box's HTTP
 submitted values, if the add button is submitting values via ajax or some
 other means then it may need a different approach.

 -Clint

 On Sun, May 1, 2011 at 8:15 PM, Coleman, Chris 
 chris.cole...@thalesgroup.com.au wrote:

  We have an app that allows people to add elements to a ListMultipleChoice
  by pressing on a button. We want the form to fail validation if the
  ListMultipleChoice contains no elements.
 
  I've tried this:
 
   targettedSetsList.add(new IValidator()
   {
 public void validate(IValidatable validatable) {
   // Always contains no items - strange
   Collection list = (Collection)validatable.getValue();
 
   if ( list.size() == 0 ) {
 ValidationError ve = new ValidationError();
 ve.setMessage(No sets have been specified for deployment);
 validatable.error(ve);
   }
 }
   });
 
  but at validation the list.size() is always 0 even if the user has added
  elements. Am I doing it the right way? Is there a better way?
 
 
 
 
 
 DISCLAIMER:---
  This e-mail transmission and any documents, files and previous e-mail
  messages
  attached to it are private and confidential. They may contain proprietary
  or copyright
  material or information that is subject to legal professional privilege.
  They are for
  the use of the intended recipient only.  Any unauthorised viewing, use,
  disclosure,
  copying, alteration, storage or distribution of, or reliance on, this
  message is
  strictly prohibited. No part may be reproduced, adapted or transmitted
  without the
  written permission of the owner. If you have received this transmission
 in
  error, or
  are not an authorised recipient, please immediately notify the sender by
  return email,
  delete this message and all copies from your e-mail system, and destroy
 any
  printed
  copies. Receipt by anyone other than the intended recipient should not be
  deemed a
  waiver of any privilege or protection. Thales Australia does not warrant
 or
  represent
  that this e-mail or any documents, files and previous e-mail messages
  attached are
  error or virus free.
 
 
 --
 
 




 DISCLAIMER:---
 This e-mail transmission and any documents, files and previous e-mail
 messages
 attached to it are private and confidential. They may contain proprietary
 or copyright
 material or information that is subject to legal professional privilege.
 They are for
 the use of the intended recipient only.  Any unauthorised viewing, use,
 disclosure,
 copying, alteration, storage or distribution of, or reliance on, this
 message is
 strictly prohibited. No part may be reproduced, 

RE: How to fail validation if ListMultipleChoice is empty

2011-05-01 Thread Coleman, Chris
According to the doco the default form processing behavior is executed for 
AjaxButton and AjaxSubmitButton (in fact AjaxSubmitButton appears to be 
deprecated - behaves the same as AjaxButton anyway?).

I am using AjaxButton.

I actually don't care about the selections but rather, the entries that the 
user has added to the list (whether selected or not) which is why I call 
getChoices() rather than getConvertedInput()

The button code is:

  AjaxButton addBtn = new AjaxButton(add) {
@Override
protected void onSubmit(AjaxRequestTarget target, Form form) {
  update(target, selectedAvailableSets, availableSetsList, 
targettedSetsList);
}

@Override
protected void onError(AjaxRequestTarget target, Form form) {
}
  };

  addBtn.setOutputMarkupId(true);

  add(addBtn);


-Original Message-
From: Clint Checketts [mailto:checke...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Monday, 2 May 2011 2:28 PM
To: users@wicket.apache.org
Subject: Re: How to fail validation if ListMultipleChoice is empty

You are correct that the Form's validation should only fire when submitting
the form. When an individual element is updated via ajax (as in an
AjaxFormComponentUpdatingBehavior) then just the processing and validations
steps are fired for the individual form component.

It makes me wonder if you are using an AjaxSubmitButton instead of just an
AjaxButton. (Or similarly an AjaxSubmitLink instead of an  AjaxLink) Mind
including your button's code?

Also, why are you calling getChoices() instead of getConvertedInput() in the
validator? Choices represent the possible selection options, the converted
input is the value of the selected choices.

-Clint

On Sun, May 1, 2011 at 9:25 PM, Coleman, Chris 
chris.cole...@thalesgroup.com.au wrote:

 Yes, it's all via AJAX.

 In the last few minutes I've tried a different approach and it works ok but
 it introduces another problem:

  form.add(new AbstractFormValidator()
  {
public FormComponent[] getDependentFormComponents()
{
  return null;
}

public void validate(Form? form)
{
  List sets = targettedSetsList.getChoices();

  if ( sets.size() == 0 ) {
targettedSetsList.error((IValidationError)new
 ValidationError().addMessageKey(error.noSetSpecified));
  }
}
  });

 This accurately detects when nothing is in the list and displays an error
 message but once emptied we can not add new elements to the list because the
 validation is also executed when the 'add' button is pressed. The validation
 fails because the list is empty so the 'add' fails, making it impossible to
 add new elements when the list is empty.

 I thought validation would only occur when the user submits the form but it
 appears to be fired off whenever the user presses the 'add' button. Is this
 to be expected?


 -Original Message-
 From: Clint Checketts [mailto:checke...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Monday, 2 May 2011 12:10 PM
 To: users@wicket.apache.org
 Subject: Re: How to fail validation if ListMultipleChoice is empty

 Lets see the code about 'adding elements by pressing on a button'.  The
 'getValue()' method is returning the value from the list box's HTTP
 submitted values, if the add button is submitting values via ajax or some
 other means then it may need a different approach.

 -Clint

 On Sun, May 1, 2011 at 8:15 PM, Coleman, Chris 
 chris.cole...@thalesgroup.com.au wrote:

  We have an app that allows people to add elements to a ListMultipleChoice
  by pressing on a button. We want the form to fail validation if the
  ListMultipleChoice contains no elements.
 
  I've tried this:
 
   targettedSetsList.add(new IValidator()
   {
 public void validate(IValidatable validatable) {
   // Always contains no items - strange
   Collection list = (Collection)validatable.getValue();
 
   if ( list.size() == 0 ) {
 ValidationError ve = new ValidationError();
 ve.setMessage(No sets have been specified for deployment);
 validatable.error(ve);
   }
 }
   });
 
  but at validation the list.size() is always 0 even if the user has added
  elements. Am I doing it the right way? Is there a better way?
 
 
 
 
 
 DISCLAIMER:---
  This e-mail transmission and any documents, files and previous e-mail
  messages
  attached to it are private and confidential. They may contain proprietary
  or copyright
  material or information that is subject to legal professional privilege.
  They are for
  the use of the intended recipient only.  Any unauthorised viewing, use,
  disclosure,
  copying, alteration, storage or distribution of, or reliance on, this
  message is
  strictly prohibited. No part may be reproduced, adapted or transmitted
  without the
  written permission of the owner. If you have received this transmission
 in
  error, or
  are not an authorised recipient, please immediately notify the sender by
  return email,
  delete this message and all 

Re: How to fail validation if ListMultipleChoice is empty

2011-05-01 Thread Clint Checketts
Good catch on AjaxSubmitButton being deprecated, I guess an IDe would have
made that obvious ;)

I do have to say using the getChoices over a proper model may give you more
work than needed in updating the underlying model objects (maybe consider
overriding the getConvertedInput to return getChoices)

It sounds like you have different buttons for adding and submitting. Correct
me if this is too hackish, but you could change the validator to check if
the addBtn is the submitting button, and ignore the validation in that case:

  form.add(new AbstractFormValidator()
  {
public FormComponent[] getDependentFormComponents()
{
  return null;
}

public void validate(Form? form)
{
  List sets = targettedSetsList.getChoices();

  if ((*!addBtn.equals(form.findSubmittingButton()) * sets.size() == 0
) {
targettedSetsList.error((IValidationError)new
  ValidationError().addMessageKey(error.noSetSpecified));
  }
}
  });


-Clint

On Mon, May 2, 2011 at 12:27 AM, Coleman, Chris 
chris.cole...@thalesgroup.com.au wrote:

 According to the doco the default form processing behavior is executed for
 AjaxButton and AjaxSubmitButton (in fact AjaxSubmitButton appears to be
 deprecated - behaves the same as AjaxButton anyway?).

 I am using AjaxButton.

 I actually don't care about the selections but rather, the entries that the
 user has added to the list (whether selected or not) which is why I call
 getChoices() rather than getConvertedInput()

 The button code is:

  AjaxButton addBtn = new AjaxButton(add) {
@Override
protected void onSubmit(AjaxRequestTarget target, Form form) {
  update(target, selectedAvailableSets, availableSetsList,
 targettedSetsList);
}

@Override
protected void onError(AjaxRequestTarget target, Form form) {
}
  };

  addBtn.setOutputMarkupId(true);

  add(addBtn);


 -Original Message-
 From: Clint Checketts [mailto:checke...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Monday, 2 May 2011 2:28 PM
 To: users@wicket.apache.org
 Subject: Re: How to fail validation if ListMultipleChoice is empty

 You are correct that the Form's validation should only fire when submitting
 the form. When an individual element is updated via ajax (as in an
 AjaxFormComponentUpdatingBehavior) then just the processing and validations
 steps are fired for the individual form component.

 It makes me wonder if you are using an AjaxSubmitButton instead of just an
 AjaxButton. (Or similarly an AjaxSubmitLink instead of an  AjaxLink) Mind
 including your button's code?

 Also, why are you calling getChoices() instead of getConvertedInput() in
 the
 validator? Choices represent the possible selection options, the converted
 input is the value of the selected choices.

 -Clint

 On Sun, May 1, 2011 at 9:25 PM, Coleman, Chris 
 chris.cole...@thalesgroup.com.au wrote:

  Yes, it's all via AJAX.
 
  In the last few minutes I've tried a different approach and it works ok
 but
  it introduces another problem:
 
   form.add(new AbstractFormValidator()
   {
 public FormComponent[] getDependentFormComponents()
 {
   return null;
 }
 
 public void validate(Form? form)
 {
   List sets = targettedSetsList.getChoices();
 
   if ( sets.size() == 0 ) {
 targettedSetsList.error((IValidationError)new
  ValidationError().addMessageKey(error.noSetSpecified));
   }
 }
   });
 
  This accurately detects when nothing is in the list and displays an error
  message but once emptied we can not add new elements to the list because
 the
  validation is also executed when the 'add' button is pressed. The
 validation
  fails because the list is empty so the 'add' fails, making it impossible
 to
  add new elements when the list is empty.
 
  I thought validation would only occur when the user submits the form but
 it
  appears to be fired off whenever the user presses the 'add' button. Is
 this
  to be expected?
 
 
  -Original Message-
  From: Clint Checketts [mailto:checke...@gmail.com]
  Sent: Monday, 2 May 2011 12:10 PM
  To: users@wicket.apache.org
  Subject: Re: How to fail validation if ListMultipleChoice is empty
 
  Lets see the code about 'adding elements by pressing on a button'.  The
  'getValue()' method is returning the value from the list box's HTTP
  submitted values, if the add button is submitting values via ajax or some
  other means then it may need a different approach.
 
  -Clint
 
  On Sun, May 1, 2011 at 8:15 PM, Coleman, Chris 
  chris.cole...@thalesgroup.com.au wrote:
 
   We have an app that allows people to add elements to a
 ListMultipleChoice
   by pressing on a button. We want the form to fail validation if the
   ListMultipleChoice contains no elements.
  
   I've tried this:
  
targettedSetsList.add(new IValidator()
{
  public void validate(IValidatable validatable) {
// Always contains no items - strange
Collection list = (Collection)validatable.getValue();
  
if ( list.size() ==