Introduction
It is common practice to use a CSS Grid to define the layout of your web application page. We shouldn’t use tables for that purpose.
Also in JSF we can use this CSS Grid but it requires quit a lot of DIV elements and thus boilerplate in your page. The good thing is that we can create a custom component which reduce the amount of html we need to put in dramatically. The component got the name gridLayout.
PrimeFaces recently introduced in his version 5.1, also CSS Grid classes. The following example comes from the user guide.
<div class="ui-grid"> <div class="ui-grid-row">
<div class="ui-grid-col-4">Col1</div>
<div class="ui-grid-col-4">Col2</div>
<div class="ui-grid-col-4">Col2</div>
</div>
</div>
But also other CSS Grid systems can be used with the gridLayout custom component. The component was first used in an application that used the Bootstrap CSS grid. And in fact, all CSS grids can be used as you specify which CSS class will be used on the row DIV and which will be used on the column DIVs.
gridLayout
The gridLayout component has 3 attributes, which are
columns: This determines the number of columns which should be created.
rowClass: Determines the CSS class which will be used on the row DIV, in above example it is ui-grid-row.
columnClasses: A comma separated list of CSS classes which will be used on the column DIVs.
The needed steps to integrate the component are described further on in this text, I already give you an example usage:
<c4j:gridLayout columns="2" rowClass="ui-grid-row" columnClasses="ui-grid-col-2, ui-grid-col-4">
<p:outputLabel for="firstName" value="First name"/>
<p:inputText id="firstName"/>
<p:outputLabel for="lastName" value="Last name"/>
<p:inputText id="lastName"/>
<h:panelGroup/>
<p:commandButton value="save"/>
</c4j:gridLayout>
The above example creates a layout with 2 columns. The first column, with the labels, spans 2 ‘columns’, the other column takes 4 ‘columns’ of the CSS grid. As you can see, we don’t need to take up the complete with available. In this example, we are just using half of the screen.
On the last row, the button is aligned with the fields due to the .
Configure the project and usage of the component.
- Download the code from GitHub. It is a maven project but I didn’t deploy it to Maven Central.
- Build it locally and add it to the dependencies of your project
<dependency> <groupId>be.rubus.web</groupId> <artifactId>gridLayout</artifactId> <version>1.0</version> </dependency>
- Define the namespace on top of your xhtml page, like
xmlns:c4j="http://www.rubus.be/component"
- Start using it, according to the info you saw already here.
Things to know
- It is released under the Apache V2 License.
- It is compiled against Java 1.5
- It is only dependent on JSF 2.0 (Java EE 6).
- It is NOT dependent on any component library.
- If you define less CSS classes in the columnClasses attribute, as you have defined in the columns attribute, columnClasses are reused from the beginning of the attribute value.
So the example from the PrimeFaces user guide can be achieved by the following coding
<c4j:gridLayout columns="3" rowClass="ui-grid-row" columnClasses="ui-grid-col-4">
<c4j:gridLayout columns="2" rowClass="ui-grid-row" columnClasses="ui-grid-col-2 alignRight, ui-grid-col-4">
Conclusion
The gridLayout component is a very small one but makes it easy to use the CSS Grid of your choice in your JSF Web pages.
Have fun coding.
Update
13/4/2015
With the new PrimeFaces 5.2 release, the panelGrid component is updated to have similar functionality as the GridLayout (but only for PrimeFaces CSS classes)
See http://jsfcorner.blogspot.co.at/2015/04/native-gridlayout-component-in.html.
See http://jsfcorner.blogspot.co.at/2015/04/native-gridlayout-component-in.html.
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