Is it possible to update parts of my page that are not JSF components?
No. The to-be-updated component has to be available by UIViewRoot#findComponent()
, so that JSF can find them, invoke encodeAll()
on it, capture the generated HTML output and pass back it in the ajax response so that JavaScript can update the HTML DOM tree with it. Plain HTML elements are not represented as real UIComponent
instances in the JSF component tree, so JSF already cannot locate them in first place.
For example, can I update a plain HTML <div>
or do I need to wrap that in a JSF component?
You need to wrap it in a JSF component like <h:panelGroup>
. You can however just use <h:panelGroup layout="block">
to represent a real <div>
in JSF. This way you don't need to wrap the <div>
in another JSF component.
<h:panelGroup layout="block" id="foo">
...
</h:panelGroup>
Since JSF 2.2 you can use new passthrough elements feature with jsf:id
attribute to declare HTML(5) elements as JSF components.
<... xmlns:jsf="http://xmlns.jcp.org/jsf">
<div jsf:id="foo">
...
</div>
<main jsf:id="bar">
...
</main>
<section jsf:id="baz">
...
</section>
They will render their output as-is, but under the covers be a concrete UIPanel
instance.
There's however one corner case in case of composite components. You can use the following approach to have a HTML element which is updateable by ajax.
<cc:implementation>
<span id="#{cc.clientId}">
...
</span>
</cc:implementation>
The explanation that this approach works is because even though the composite component does not render itself to the HTML output, it is by itself available by UIViewRoot#findComponent()
.
See also:
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