Please make sure you have read the Tag Syntax document and understand how tag attribute syntax works.
Instantiates a class that conforms to the JavaBeans specification. This tag has a body which can contain a number of param elements to set any mutator methods on that class.
If the var attribute is set on the BeanTag, it will place the instantiated bean into the stack's Context.
{% remote_file_content https://raw.githubusercontent.com/apache/struts/master/core/src/site/resources/tags/bean-description.html %}
{% remote_file_content https://raw.githubusercontent.com/apache/struts/master/core/src/site/resources/tags/bean-attributes.html %}
[@s.bean name="org.apache.struts2.example.counter.SimpleCounter" var="counter"] [s:param name="foo" value="BAR"/] The value of foo is : [s:property value="foo"/], when inside the bean tag. [/s:bean]
<s:bean name="org.apache.struts2.example.counter.SimpleCounter" var="counter"> <s:param name="foo" value="BAR" /> The value of foot is : <s:property value="foo"/>, when inside the bean tag <br /> </s:bean>
This example instantiates a bean called SimpleCounter and sets the foo property (setFoo('BAR')
). The SimpleCounter
object is then pushed onto the ValueStack
, which means that we can call its accessor methods (getFoo()
) with the property tag and get their values.
In the above example, the id has been set to a value of counter
. This means that the SimpleCounter
class will be placed into the stack's context. You can access the SimpleCounter
class using a Struts tag:
<s:property value="#counter" />
[s:property value="#counter.foo"/]
In the property tag example, the # tells Ognl to search the context for the SimpleCounter class which has an id(key)
of counter
.