@Retention(value=RUNTIME) @Target(value={TYPE,FIELD,METHOD,PARAMETER}) @Inherited @Qualifier public @interface FacesConverter
The presence of this annotation on a class automatically registers the
class with the runtime as a Converter
. The value of the value()
attribute is taken to be
converter-id, the value of the forClass()
attribute is taken to be converter-for-class and
the fully qualified class name of the class to which this annotation is attached is taken to be the
converter-class. The implementation must guarantee that for each class annotated with
FacesConverter
, found with the algorithm in
section 11.4 "Annotations that correspond to and may take the place of entries in the Application Configuration Resources" of the Jakarta Faces Specification Document,
the proper variant of
Application.addConverter()
is called. If converter-id is not the empty string,
Application.addConverter(java.lang.String,java.lang.String)
is called, passing the
derived converter-id as the first argument and the derived converter-class as the second argument.
If converter-id is the empty string,
Application.addConverter(java.lang.Class,java.lang.String)
is called, passing the
converter-for-class as the first argument and the derived converter-class as the second argument.
The implementation must guarantee that all such calls to addConverter()
happen during application
startup time and before any requests are serviced.
The preceding text contains an important subtlety which application users should understand. It is not possible to
use a single @FacesConverter
annotation to register a single Converter
implementation both in the
by-class
and the by-converter-id
data structures. One way to achieve this result is to put the actual
converter logic in an abstract base class, without a @FacesConverter
annotation, and derive two sub-classes,
each with a @FacesConverter
annotation. One sub-class has a value
attribute but no forClass
attribute, and the other sub-class has the converse.
Please see the ViewDeclarationLanguage documentation for <h:selectManyListBox>
for another important subtlety regarding converters and collections.
Modifier and Type | Optional Element and Description |
---|---|
java.lang.Class |
forClass
The value of this annotation attribute is taken to be the converter-for-class with which instances of this
class of converter can be instantiated by calling
|
boolean |
managed
The value of this annotation attribute is taken to be an indicator that flags whether or not the given converter is a CDI managed converter. |
java.lang.String |
value
The value of this annotation attribute is taken to be the converter-id with which instances of this class of
converter can be instantiated by calling
|
public abstract java.lang.String value
The value of this annotation attribute is taken to be the converter-id with which instances of this class of
converter can be instantiated by calling
Application.createConverter(java.lang.String)
.
public abstract java.lang.Class forClass
The value of this annotation attribute is taken to be the converter-for-class with which instances of this
class of converter can be instantiated by calling
Application.createConverter(java.lang.Class)
.