... and yet another way is to use Spring 2.0 instead of your JSF managed
beans as well, that works perfect.

Declare your managed-beans in whatever scope you want them (session or
request) and use Spring's init-method feature, just as you're used to.

regards,

Martin

On 2/5/07, Cagatay Civici <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Hi,

Another way is to create your own mapping;

http://www.jroller.com/page/cagataycivici?entry=managed_beans_aware_of_the

Regards,

Cagatay

On 2/5/07, Volker Weber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> all properties are set in the order they are defined in the
> faces-config.xml.
> This is defined in the spec.
> So you can define a dummy setter as last one in the config as init
> method.
> e.g.:
>
>
> <managed-bean>
>   ...
>   <managed-property>
>     <description>
>       dummy init MUST be the last property
>     </description>
>     <property-name>init</property-name>
>     <value>true</value>
>   </managed-property>
> </managed-bean>
>
> public void setInit(boolean init) {
>     init();
>   }
>
> Regards,
>   Volker
>
> 2007/2/5, Lisa < [EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> >
> > Is there a way to automatically call an init() method after all
> setters have
> > been called on a managed-bean?  I am looking for something I can put
> in the
> > .xml config file or an interface that I can extend.
> >
> > Spring has this facility.  We are using Spring for most of the
> framework but
> > using JSF managed-bean facility for all backing beans.
> >
> >
> > thanks
> >
> >
> > L
> > --
> > View this message in context:
> http://www.nabble.com/JSF-lifecyle---managed-bean-tf3172695.html#a8801378
> > Sent from the MyFaces - Users mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
> >
> >
>




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