public class VariableInfo
extends java.lang.Object
Scripting variables generated by a custom action have an associated scope of either AT_BEGIN, NESTED, or AT_END.
The class name (VariableInfo.getClassName) in the returned objects is used to
determine the types of the scripting variables. Note that because scripting
variables are assigned their values from scoped attributes which cannot be of
primitive types, "boxed" types such as
java.lang.Integer
must be used instead of primitives.
The class name may be a Fully Qualified Class Name, or a short class name.
If a Fully Qualified Class Name is provided, it should refer to a class that should be in the CLASSPATH for the Web Application (see Servlet 2.4 specification - essentially it is WEB-INF/lib and WEB-INF/classes). Failure to be so will lead to a translation-time error.
If a short class name is given in the VariableInfo objects, then the class name must be that of a public class in the context of the import directives of the page where the custom action appears. The class must also be in the CLASSPATH for the Web Application (see Servlet 2.4 specification - essentially it is WEB-INF/lib and WEB-INF/classes). Failure to be so will lead to a translation-time error.
Usage Comments
Frequently a fully qualified class name will refer to a class that is known to the tag library and thus, delivered in the same JAR file as the tag handlers. In most other remaining cases it will refer to a class that is in the platform on which the JSP processor is built (like J2EE). Using fully qualified class names in this manner makes the usage relatively resistant to configuration errors.
A short name is usually generated by the tag library based on some attributes passed through from the custom action user (the author), and it is thus less robust: for instance a missing import directive in the referring JSP page will lead to an invalid short name class and a translation error.
Synchronization Protocol
The result of the invocation on getVariableInfo is an array of VariableInfo objects. Each such object describes a scripting variable by providing its name, its type, whether the variable is new or not, and what its scope is. Scope is best described through a picture:
The JSP 2.0 specification defines the interpretation of 3 values:
1 Called after
Variable Synchronization Points
doStartTag() doInitBody() doAfterBody() doEndTag() doTag() Tag
AT_BEGIN, NESTED
AT_BEGIN, AT_END
IterationTag
AT_BEGIN, NESTED
AT_BEGIN, NESTED
AT_BEGIN, AT_END
BodyTag
AT_BEGIN, NESTED1
AT_BEGIN, NESTED1
AT_BEGIN, NESTED
AT_BEGIN, AT_END
SimpleTag
AT_BEGIN, AT_END
doStartTag()
ifEVAL_BODY_INCLUDE
is returned, or afterdoInitBody()
otherwise.
Variable Information in the TLD
Scripting variable information can also be encoded directly for most cases into the Tag Library Descriptor using the <variable> subelement of the <tag> element. See the JSP specification.
Modifier and Type | Field and Description |
---|---|
static int |
AT_BEGIN
Scope information that scripting variable is visible after start tag.
|
static int |
AT_END
Scope information that scripting variable is visible after end tag.
|
static int |
NESTED
Scope information that scripting variable is visible only within the
start/end tags.
|
Constructor and Description |
---|
VariableInfo(java.lang.String varName,
java.lang.String className,
boolean declare,
int scope)
Constructor These objects can be created (at translation time) by the
TagExtraInfo instances.
|
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
java.lang.String |
getClassName()
Returns the type of this variable.
|
boolean |
getDeclare()
Returns whether this is a new variable.
|
int |
getScope()
Returns the lexical scope of the variable.
|
java.lang.String |
getVarName()
Returns the name of the scripting variable.
|
public static final int NESTED
public static final int AT_BEGIN
public static final int AT_END
public VariableInfo(java.lang.String varName, java.lang.String className, boolean declare, int scope)
varName
- The name of the scripting variableclassName
- The type of this variabledeclare
- If true, it is a new variable (in some languages this will
require a declaration)scope
- Indication on the lexical scope of the variablepublic java.lang.String getVarName()
public java.lang.String getClassName()
public boolean getDeclare()
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