Thanks Marc, I think it's the simplest solution. 2014-05-30 18:36 GMT+02:00 Marc Michele <develo...@tiv-consulting.de>: > This is simple: > > public class MyAction extends ActionSupport { > private String myParam; > > public String getMyParam() { > return myParam; > } > > public void setMyParam(String myParam) { > this.myParam = myParam; > } > > public void setAnotherName(String myParam) { > this.myParam = myParam; > } > } > > The only problem is to set it at the same time, in same request, so you > have to make a decision with parameter is the winner. > > Greets > Marc > > > Am 30.05.2014 10:38, schrieb Mael Le Guével: >> Hi, >> Given the following action: >> >> public class MyAction extends ActionSupport { >> private String myParam; >> >> public String getMyParam() { >> return myParam; >> } >> >> public void setMyParam(String myParam) { >> this.myParam = myParam; >> } >> } >> >> I am able to pass a "myParam" parameter to this action. >> For instance: >> http://url-to-my-app/myAction.action?myParam=aValue >> (Yes I know, everyone knows that :)) >> >> What I would like to do is having multiple parameter names that would >> map to "myParam". For instance the following URL would also set the >> value of "myParam" to "aValue": >> http://url-to-my-app/myAction.action?anotherName=aValue >> >> As it can be the source of multiple problems, I guess that struts does >> not allow to do this? >> So, what would be the best way to achieve it? Extending the parameters >> interceptor? >> >> Thanks. >> >> Mael. >> > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: user-unsubscr...@struts.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: user-h...@struts.apache.org >
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