Sorry, sent the mail instead of pasting my code, seems like I'm getting mad on
this ;-)
if(component instanceof UIXComponentBase) {
UIXComponentBase trinidadComponent = (UIXComponentBase) component;
((FacesBean)
trinidadComponent.getFacesBean()).setProperty(PropertyKey.createPropertyKey("styleClass"),
styleClass);
}
Regards,
Tom
________________________________
Von: Simon Lessard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Gesendet: Montag, 3. März 2008 19:58
An: MyFaces Discussion
Betreff: Re: Why is the styleClass Property always overridden?
Wow... really not my day... there's no such attribute... only contentStyle... I
always create it when I make custom components... oh well... JIRA ticket time...
On Mon, Mar 3, 2008 at 1:56 PM, Simon Lessard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Oups, I misread something. You need to use the contentStyleClass
attribute to affect the input's style class, the styleClass attribute applies
the class on the input container.
On Mon, Mar 3, 2008 at 1:53 PM, Simon Lessard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello Thomas,
why don't you simply use <tr:inputText styleClass="myClass"/>?
If the class changes at runtime you can use <tr:inputText
styleClass="#{bean.myClass}"/> or programatically:
<tr:inputText binding="#{bean.input}"/>
CoreInputText input;
public CoreInputText getInput()
{
return input;
}
public void setInput(CoreInputText input)
{
this.input = input;
this.input.setStyleClass("myClass");
}
Regards,
~ Simon
On Mon, Mar 3, 2008 at 1:39 PM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi everybody,
Im stuck with a problem and may need a little help to
get through.
Basically all I want to do is to add the name of a
CSS-class programmatically to the styleClass attribute so that somithing like
this is rendered in HTML:
<input id="myText" class="af_inputText_content myClass"
...>
The 'myClass' should be added to the class inserted by
the skinning-renderer of Trinidad.
Even the very basic approach of using the styleClass
Attribute of <tr:inputText> does not work as only af_inputText_content is
inserted as value for the class attribute.
Manipulating the componentes attribute map works for
JSF-Standard-Components but not for Trinidad-Components.
This is what my code looks like:
Map<String, Object>
attributes = component.getAttributes();
String styleClass =
(String) attributes.get("styleClass");
// Append myClass to
whatever is set as styleClass
attributes.put("styleClass", styleClass + " myClass");
Do I have to use the acesBean for Trinidad-Components?
If so, how can the styleClass-attribute be accessed?
Thanks in advance,
Tom
Thomas Asel
Diplom Informatiker (FH)
Selbständiger Softwareentwickler
im Auftrag der 24/7 IT-Services GmbH
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