(Quick Reference)
withFormat
Purpose
Renders different responses based on the incoming request
Accept
header, format parameter or URI extension. See
content negotiation for more information.
Examples
import grails.converters.XMLclass BookController { def list() {
def books = Book.list() withFormat {
html bookList:books
js { render "alert('hello')" }
xml { render books as XML }
}
}
}
Description
The
withFormat
accepts a Closure which contains methods corresponding to the different content types you want to respond to. For example:
withFormat {
html bookList: books
js { render "alert('hello')" }
xml { render books as XML }
}
Here we invoke three methods called
html
,
js
and
xml
that use mime type names configured in
grails-app/conf/Config.groovy
(See
content negotiation for more information). The call to
html
accepts a model (a Map) which is passed on to the view. Grails searches for a view called
grails-app/views/book/list.html.gsp
and if that is not found fallback to
grails-app/views/book/list.gsp
.
Note that the order of the types is significant if the request format is "all" or if more than one content type has the same "q" rating in the accept header. In the former case, the first type handler in the block is executed ("html" in the short example above). The latter case is more confusing because it only holds if there is more than one content type with the highest "q" rating for which you have a type handler
and you have more than one type handler matching that "q" rating. For example if the request has "text/html" and "application/xml" with a "q" rating of 1.0, then this code:
withFormat {
xml { … }
html { … }
}
will use the "xml" type handler for the request.
Another important factor to note is that the
withFormat
method deals with the
response format and not the request format. As of Grails 2.0, there is a separate
withFormat
method made available on the
request
that you can use to handle the request format which is dictated by the
CONTENT_TYPE
header of the request:
request.withFormat {
xml { .. }
html { .. }
}
If you require that the model be lazily executed you can pass a Closure instead of a Map:
withFormat {
html { [bookList: Book.list()] }
…
}
This way the
html
Closure will only be executed if the
html
format is matched.
Grails ignores the HTTP Accept header unless you add a grails.mime.use.accept.header = true
setting to your Config.groovy
file. In other words, withFormat()
will be completely unaffected by the Accept header without that setting.