... 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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