Oracle Fusion Middleware Tag Reference for Oracle ADF Faces
11g Release 2 (11.1.2.4.0)

E17491-06

<af:trainButtonBar>

af:trainButtonBar trainButtonBar train button bar

UIComponent class: oracle.adf.view.rich.component.rich.nav.RichTrainButtonBar
Component type: oracle.adf.RichTrainButtonBar

Naming container: Yes. When referring to children of this component ("partialTriggers", findComponent(), etc.), you must prefix the child's ID with this component's ID and a colon (':')

The trainButtonBar component includes two buttons that provide an additional means to navigate a multi-step process. The train component can also be used to navigate a multi-step process. TrainButtonBars are not rendered on printable pages.

The trainButtonBar by default, provides a 'Back' and a 'Next' buttons, that move back and forth in a multi-step process and in an order as dictated by the underlying model implmentation.

Model

The trainButtonBar takes a model of type org.apache.myfaces.adf.model.MenuModel. The last node along the focusPath is usually the current active stop and its previous and next nodes at the same level are rendered as buttons "Back" and "Next" respectively. The default MenuModel implementation knows how to go from the current viewId to the focusRowKey. Notice that the MenuModel has no special knowledge of page navigation and places no requirements on the nodes that go into the tree. The last node along with its sibling, in the tree are stamped out using the "nodeStamp" facet, which should contain a commandNavigationItem component. This allows the default actionListener mechanism to be used for page navigation.

Note: When using Facelets as the page declaration language (PDL), the 'nodestamp' facet, if explicitly specified, should contain only one commandNavigationItem. Multiple components are not supported by this facet.

For more information about train behaviors please refer to the tag documentation for the train component.

Simplified trainButtonBar Tag Usage

The tag usage for the trainButtonBar component has been simplified. This tag can be used in the simple case as below:
<af:trainButtonBar value="#{my_bean.menuModel}"/>
The benefits of using the simple tag are:

Geometry Management

Screen Shot(s)


trainButtonBar screenshot
TrainButtonBar component with Previous and Next buttons above an af:train component.

Code Example(s)

<af:trainButtonBar var="node" value="#{menuModel}" id="tbb1">
  <f:facet name="nodeStamp">
    <af:commandNavigationItem action="#{node.action}"
                              disabled="#{node.disabled}"
                              immediate="#{node.immediate}"
                              textAndAccessKey="#{node.textAndAccessKey}"
                              visited="#{node.visited}"
                              id="cn1"/>
  </f:facet>
</af:trainButtonBar>
   

Events

Type Phases Description
org.apache.myfaces.trinidad.event.AttributeChangeEvent Invoke Application,
Apply Request Values
Event delivered to describe an attribute change. Attribute change events are not delivered for any programmatic change to a property. They are only delivered when a renderer changes a property without the application's specific request. An example of an attribute change event might include the width of a column that supported client-side resizing.

Supported Facets

Name Description
nodeStamp the component to use to stamp each element in the process. A CommandNavigationItem is expected.

Attributes

Name Type Supports EL? Description
attributeChangeListener javax.el.MethodExpression Only EL a method reference to an attribute change listener. Attribute change events are not delivered for any programmatic change to a property. They are only delivered when a renderer changes a property without the application's specific request. An example of an attribute change events might include the width of a column that supported client-side resizing.
binding oracle.adf.view.rich.component.rich.nav.RichTrainButtonBar Only EL an EL reference that will store the component instance on a bean. This can be used to give programmatic access to a component from a backing bean, or to move creation of the component to a backing bean.
clientComponent boolean Yes whether a client-side component will be generated. A component may be generated whether or not this flag is set, but if client Javascript requires the component object, this must be set to true to guarantee the component's presence. Client component objects that are generated today by default may not be present in the future; setting this flag is the only way to guarantee a component's presence, and clients cannot rely on implicit behavior. However, there is a performance cost to setting this flag, so clients should avoid turning on client components unless absolutely necessary.
customizationId String Yes This attribute is deprecated. The 'id' attribute should be used when applying persistent customizations. This attribute will be removed in the next release.
id String No the identifier for the component. The identifier must follow a subset of the syntax allowed in HTML:
  • Must not be a zero-length String.
  • First character must be an ASCII letter (A-Za-z) or an underscore ('_').
  • Subsequent characters must be an ASCII letter or digit (A-Za-z0-9), an underscore ('_'), or a dash ('-').
inlineStyle String Yes the CSS styles to use for this component. This is intended for basic style changes. The inlineStyle is a set of CSS styles that are applied to the root DOM element of the component. Be aware that because of browser CSS precedence rules, CSS rendered on a DOM element takes precedence over external stylesheets like the skin file. Therefore skins will not be able to override what you set on this attribute. If the inlineStyle's CSS properties do not affect the DOM element you want affected, then you will have to create a skin and use the skinning keys which are meant to target particular DOM elements, like ::label or ::icon-style.
partialTriggers String[] Yes the IDs of the components that should trigger a partial update. This component will listen on the trigger components. If one of the trigger components receives an event that will cause it to update in some way, this component will request to be updated too. Identifiers are relative to the source component (this component), and must account for NamingContainers. If your component is already inside of a naming container, you can use a single colon to start the search from the root of the page, or multiple colons to move up through the NamingContainers - "::" will pop out of the component's naming container (or itself if the component is a naming container) and begin the search from there, ":::" will pop out of two naming containers (including itself if the component is a naming container) and begin the search from there, etc.
rendered boolean Yes whether the component is rendered. When set to false, no output will be delivered for this component (the component will not in any way be rendered, and cannot be made visible on the client). If you want to change a component's rendered attribute from false to true using PPR, set the partialTrigger attribute of its parent component so the parent refreshes and in turn will render this component.
shortDesc String Yes the short description of the component. This text is commonly used by user agents to display tooltip help text, in which case the behavior for the tooltip is controlled by the user agent, e.g. Firefox 2 truncates long tooltips. For form components, the shortDesc is displayed in a note window. For components that support the helpTopicId attribute it is recommended that helpTopicId is used as it is more flexible and is more accessibility-compliant.
styleClass String Yes a CSS style class to use for this component. The style class can be defined in your jspx page or in a skinning CSS file, for example, or you can use one of our public style classes, like 'AFInstructionText'.
unsecure java.util.Set Yes A whitespace separated list of attributes whose values ordinarily can be set only on the server, but need to be settable on the client. Currently, this is supported only for the "disabled" attribute. Note that when you are able to set a property on the client, you will be allowed to by using the the .setProperty('attribute', newValue) method, but not the .setXXXAttribute(newValue) method. For example, if you have unsecure="disabled", then on the client you can use the method .setProperty('disabled', false), while the method .setDisabled(false) will not work and will provide a javascript error that setDisabled is not a function.
value Object Yes the hierarchy of data - must be of type org.apache.myfaces.trinidad.model.MenuModel
var String No Name of the EL variable used to reference each element of this collection. Once this component has completed rendering, this variable is removed (or reverted back to its previous value).
varStatus String No Name of the EL variable used to reference the varStatus information. Once this component has completed rendering, this variable is removed (or reverted back to its previous value). The VarStatus provides contextual information about the state of the component to EL expressions. For components that iterate, varStatus also provides loop counter information. Please see the this component's documentation for the specific properties on the varStatus. The common properties on varStatus include:
  • "model" - returns the CollectionModel for this component
  • "index" - returns the zero based row index
visible boolean Yes the visibility of the component. If it is "false", the component will be hidden on the client. Unlike "rendered", this does not affect the lifecycle on the server - the component may have its bindings executed, etc. - and the visibility of the component can be toggled on and off on the client, or toggled with PPR. When "rendered" is false, the component will not in any way be rendered, and cannot be made visible on the client. In most cases, use the "rendered" property instead of the "visible" property.
Not supported on the following renderkits: org.apache.myfaces.trinidad.core