passing value to JSP via javaScript
boolean canModify = UTIL.hasSecurity("PFTMODFY") && something;
function name() {
I need to pass a value false to something when the page loads.
}
window.onLoad = name
How can i pass a val开发者_如何学Pythonue from JavaScript to JSP on the page load
I think you mean it the other way around, have server-side code output a value that JavaScript can see at page-load time.
Sending from your server code (JSP) to your client code (JavaScript)
Just output it like you would anything else, e.g.:
<%
boolean canModify = UTIL.hasSecurity("PFTMODFY") && something;
%>
var canModify = <%=canModify%>;
// ^ ^
// | +-- server-side variable
// +-- client-side variable
When the JSP actually runs, the script code returned to the client will simply be
var canModify = false;
or
var canModify = true;
That's a boolean; if you need to output a string, you need to put the quotes around it and be careful that you escape anything within it that should be escaped inside a JavaScript literal string (like a backslash, for instance, and whatever quote character you're using).
Sending from your client code (JavaScript) to your server code (JSP)
But if you really mean you want to send a value back to the server on page load (which seems odd, but hey), you'd have to use Ajax for that. If you're going to be doing Ajax stuff, I'd recommend using a library like jQuery, Closure, Prototype, YUI, or any of several others as they can dramatically simplify the process for you. For instance, using jQuery, this client-side code sends a value back to the server:
jQuery.get("/your/page/url", {"name": "value"});
(or jQuery.post
for things that make changes). Using Prototype, it'd be:
new Ajax.Request("/your/page/url", {
method: "GET", // or, of couse, "POST"
parameters: {"name": "value"}
});
All of the libs I mentioned above have similarly easy-to-use mechanisms for sending data to the server. Note that this mechanism is bound by the Same Origin Policy.
You don't need a library for this, of course — anything a library can do, you can do yourself. The features I've listed above are all wrappers for the XMLHttpRequest
object (Wikipedia, MSDN, MDC). See the linked resources for examples.
Non-Ajax hack
I shouldn't have said you need to use Ajax for this, more like you want to. :-) If, for some reason, you really didn't want to use Ajax you could do it by adding something to the page with JavaScript that triggers a retrieval from the server, and then include your value as a flag in that request. For instance:
var link = document.createElement('link');
link.setAttribute('rel', 'stylesheet');
link.src = "/path/to/jsp?name=" + encodeURIComponent(value);
document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].appendChild(link);
Your JSP would do whatever it needs to do with the query string, and then return anything that's valid in a stylesheet (/* */
, for instance). Or if you don't want to use a style sheet link, use an img
tag and return a transparent pixel; etc.
But I wouldn't do that. I'd use Ajax.
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