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Get Flow Variable Values to a Visualforce Page

Flow variable values can be displayed in a Visualforce page. Once you’ve embedded your flow in a Visualforce page, you can use Visualforce markup to get values for variables or record variables. To display values for a collection variable or a record collection variable, you can use Visualforce markup to get the individual values contained in the collection.

You can get only variables that allow output access. If you reference a variable that doesn’t allow output access, attempts to get the variable are ignored. Compilation can fail for the Visualforce page, its <apex:page> component, or the Apex class.

Note

The following example uses an Apex class to get a record variable value from a flow and then displays it in a Visualforce page.
1public class FlowController {
2    public Flow.Interview.flowname myflow { get; set; }
3    public Case apexCaseVar;
4    public Case getApexCaseVar() {
5        return myflow.caseVar;
6    }
7}
1<apex:page controller="FlowController" tabStyle="Case">
2    <flow:interview name="flowname" interview="{!myflow}"/>
3    <apex:outputText value="Default Case Priority: {!apexCaseVar.Priority}"/>
4</apex:page>
This example uses an Apex class to get the values that are stored in a string collection variable (emailsCollVar) in the flow. Then it uses a Visualforce page to run the flow interview. The Visualforce page iterates over the flow’s collection variable and displays the values for each item in the collection.
1public class FlowController {
2    public Flow.Interview.flowname myflow { get; set; }
3
4    public List<String> getVarValue() {
5        if (myflow == null) { 
6            return null; 
7        }
8        else {
9            return (List<String>)myflow.emailsCollVar;
10        }
11    }
12}
1<apex:page controller="FlowController">
2    <flow:interview name="flowname" interview="{!myflow}" />
3        <apex:repeat value="{!varValue}" var="item">
4        <apex:outputText value="{!item}"/><br/>
5        </apex:repeat>
6</apex:page>

The following example uses an Apex class to set the flow to {!myflow} and then uses a Visualforce page to run the flow interview. The Visualforce page uses a data table to iterate over the flow’s record collection variable and display the values for each item in the collection.

1public class MyCustomController {
2   public Flow.Interview.flowname myflow { get; set; }
3}
1<apex:page controller="MyCustomController" tabStyle="Account">
2   <flow:interview name="flowname" interview="{!myflow}" reRender="nameSection" />
3    <!-- The data table iterates over the variable set in the "value" attribute and 
4         sets that variable to the value for the "var" attribute, so that instead of 
5         referencing {!myflow.collectionVariable} in each column, you can simply refer 
6         to "account".-->
7    <apex:dataTable value="{!myflow.collectionVariable}" var="account" 
8        rowClasses="odd,even" border="1" cellpadding="4" id="nameSection">
9        <!-- Add a column for each value that you want to display.-->
10        <apex:column >
11            <apex:facet name="header">Name</apex:facet>
12            <apex:outputlink value="/{!account['Id']}">
13                {!account['Name']}
14            </apex:outputlink>
15        </apex:column>
16        <apex:column >
17            <apex:facet name="header">Rating</apex:facet>
18            <apex:outputText value="{!account['Rating']}"/>
19        </apex:column>
20        <apex:column >
21            <apex:facet name="header">Billing City</apex:facet>
22            <apex:outputText value="{!account['BillingCity']}"/>
23        </apex:column>
24        <apex:column >
25            <apex:facet name="header">Employees</apex:facet>
26            <apex:outputText value="{!account['NumberOfEmployees']}"/>
27        </apex:column>
28    </apex:dataTable>
29</apex:page>

Depending on the contents of the record collection variable in your flow, here’s what that data table looks like.Example of a data table that displays the contents of a record collection variable