Class ThemeTag

All Implemented Interfaces:
IterationTag, JspTag, Tag, TryCatchFinally, Serializable, ArgumentAware

@Deprecated(since="6.0") public class ThemeTag extends MessageTag
Deprecated.
as of 6.0, with no direct replacement
The <theme> tag looks up a theme message in the scope of this page. Messages are looked up using the ApplicationContext's ThemeSource, and thus should support internationalization.

Regards an HTML escaping setting, either on this tag instance, the page level, or the web.xml level.

If "code" isn't set or cannot be resolved, "text" will be used as default message.

Message arguments can be specified via the arguments attribute or by using nested <spring:argument> tags.

Attribute Summary
Attribute Required? Runtime Expression? Description
arguments false true Set optional message arguments for this tag, as a (comma-)delimited String (each String argument can contain JSP EL), an Object array (used as argument array), or a single Object (used as single argument).
argumentSeparator false true The separator character to be used for splitting the arguments string value; defaults to a 'comma' (',').
code false true The code (key) to use when looking up the message. If code is not provided, the text attribute will be used.
htmlEscape false true Set HTML escaping for this tag, as boolean value. Overrides the default HTML escaping setting for the current page.
javaScriptEscape false true Set JavaScript escaping for this tag, as boolean value. Default is false.
message false true A MessageSourceResolvable argument (direct or through JSP EL).
scope false true The scope to use when exporting the result to a variable. This attribute is only used when var is also set. Possible values are page, request, session and application.
text false true Default text to output when a message for the given code could not be found. If both text and code are not set, the tag will output null.
var false true The string to use when binding the result to the page, request, session or application scope. If not specified, the result gets outputted to the writer (i.e. typically directly to the JSP).
Author:
Jean-Pierre Pawlak, Juergen Hoeller
See Also: