§Actions, Controllers and Results
§What is an Action?
Most of the requests received by a Play application are handled by an Action
.
A play.api.mvc.Action
is basically a (play.api.mvc.Request => play.api.mvc.Result)
function that handles a request and generates a result to be sent to the client.
val echo = Action { request =>
Ok("Got request [" + request + "]")
}
An action returns a play.api.mvc.Result
value, representing the HTTP response to send to the web client. In this example Ok
constructs a 200 OK response containing a text/plain response body.
§Building an Action
The play.api.mvc.Action
companion object offers several helper methods to construct an Action value.
The first simplest one just takes as argument an expression block returning a Result
:
Action {
Ok("Hello world")
}
This is the simplest way to create an Action, but we don’t get a reference to the incoming request. It is often useful to access the HTTP request calling this Action.
So there is another Action builder that takes as an argument a function Request => Result
:
Action { request =>
Ok("Got request [" + request + "]")
}
It is often useful to mark the request
parameter as implicit
so it can be implicitely used by other APIs that need it:
Action { implicit request =>
Ok("Got request [" + request + "]")
}
The last way of creating an Action value is to specify an additional BodyParser
argument:
Action(parse.json) { implicit request =>
Ok("Got request [" + request + "]")
}
Body parsers will be covered later in this manual. For now you just need to know that the other methods of creating Action values use a default Any content body parser.
§Controllers are action generators
A Controller
is nothing more than a singleton object that generates Action
values.
The simplest use case for defining an action generator is a method with no parameters that returns an Action
value :
package controllers
import play.api.mvc._
object Application extends Controller {
def index = Action {
Ok("It works!")
}
}
Of course, the action generator method can have parameters, and these parameters can be captured by the Action
closure:
def hello(name: String) = Action {
Ok("Hello " + name)
}
§Simple results
For now we are just interested in simple results: An HTTP result with a status code, a set of HTTP headers and a body to be sent to the web client.
These results are defined by play.api.mvc.SimpleResult
:
def index = Action {
SimpleResult(
header = ResponseHeader(200, Map(CONTENT_TYPE -> "text/plain")),
body = Enumerator("Hello world!")
)
}
Of course there are several helpers available to create common results such as the Ok
result in the sample above:
def index = Action {
Ok("Hello world!")
}
This produces exactly the same result as before.
Here are several examples to create various results:
val ok = Ok("Hello world!")
val notFound = NotFound
val pageNotFound = NotFound(<h1>Page not found</h1>)
val badRequest = BadRequest(views.html.form(formWithErrors))
val oops = InternalServerError("Oops")
val anyStatus = Status(488)("Strange response type")
All of these helpers can be found in the play.api.mvc.Results
trait and companion object.
§Redirects are simple results too
Redirecting the browser to a new URL is just another kind of simple result. However, these result types don’t take a response body.
There are several helpers available to create redirect results:
def index = Action {
Redirect("/user/home")
}
The default is to use a 303 SEE_OTHER
response type, but you can also set a more specific status code if you need one:
def index = Action {
Redirect("/user/home", status = MOVED_PERMANENTLY)
}
§“TODO” dummy page
You can use an empty Action
implementation defined as TODO
: the result is a standard ‘Not implemented yet’ result page:
def index(name:String) = TODO
Next: HTTP Routing