Linebreaks in HTML are represented by <br />
element, not by the
character. Even more, open the average HTML source code by rightclick, View Source in browser and you'll "see"
over all place. They are however not presented as such in the final HTML presentation. Only the <br />
will.
So, yes, you need to replace them by <br />
. You can use JSTL functions for this:
<... xmlns:fn="http://xmlns.jcp.org/jsp/jstl/functions">
<h:outputText value="#{fn:replace(bean.text,'
','<br/>')}" escape="false" />
Note: when using Apache EL instead of Oracle EL, double-escape the backslash as in \n
.
<h:outputText value="#{fn:replace(bean.text,'\n','<br/>')}" escape="false" />
Otherwise you will face an exception with the message Failed to parse the expression with root cause org.apache.el.parser.ParseException: Encountered <ILLEGAL_CHARACTER>
.
This all is however ugly and the escape="false"
makes it sensitive to XSS attacks if the value comes from enduser input and you don't sanitize it beforehand. A better alternative is to keep using
and set CSS white-space
property to preformatted on the parent element. If you'd like to wrap lines inside the context of a block element, then set pre-wrap
. Or if you'd like to collapse spaces and tabs as well, then set pre-line
.
E.g.
<h:outputText value="#{bean.text}" styleClass="preformatted" />
.preformatted {
white-space: pre-wrap;
}
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