The expression ${foo}
uses behind the scenes JspContext#findAttribute()
which searches for attributes in PageContext
, HttpServletRequest
, HttpSession
and ServletContext
in this order by their getAttribute("foo")
method whereby foo
from ${foo}
thus represents the attribute name "foo"
and returns the first non-null object.
So, if you do in a servlet
ArrayList<Person> persons = getItSomehow();
request.setAttribute("persons", persons); // It's now available by ${persons}
request.getRequestDispatcher("/WEB-INF/persons.jsp").forward(request, response);
And call this servlet by URL, then you'll be able to iterate over it in page.jsp
as follows:
<c:foreach items="${persons}" var="person">
${person.title}
<c:forEach>
The above is also equally valid when you put it in the session scope instead
request.getSession().setAttribute("persons", persons);
or even in the application scope
getServletContext().setAttribute("persons", persons);
EL will for title
in ${person.title}
implicitly look for a public instance (not static!) method prefixed with get
in Person
class like below:
public String getTitle() {
return title;
}
The field title
does not necessarily need to exist in the class (so you can even return a hardcoded string and keep using ${person.title}
), and it does not necessarily need to be an instance field (so it can also be a static field, as long as the getter method itself isn't static).
Only boolean
(not Boolean
!) getters have a special treatment; EL will implicitly look for a public method prefixed with is
. E.g. for a ${person.awesome}
:
public boolean isAwesome() {
return awesome;
}
See also:
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