Recall from Part 1 that JavaServer Faces (JSF) is conceptually a mixture of Struts (Apache’s popular open source JSP framework) and Swing (Java’s standard desktop application framework). Like Struts, ...
Over the last few years, a variety of frameworks for building Java–based web applications have been created. For years, Struts have aided developers build web applications using a variation of the ...
Recently, I had the good fortune of training and mentoring a group of novice Java developers as we implemented a complex Web application using Struts, Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB), servlets, JavaServer ...
⚠ Work in progress. Untested preview. With many spelling errors inside. ⚠ Docker-ized version of the ILIAS Java Server. If activated, it is possible to search in PDF, HTML files and HTML-Learning ...
Site Offer This week's featured offering from Reg associate IT-minds.com is a comprehensive developers guide to building applications with JavaServer Pages 2.0. JavaServer Pages Developers Handbook ...
The Java Community Process is refreshingly low-key compared to much of the software industry, so it was probably not surprising that there was very little hoopla this past week when JavaServer Faces ...
You can't judge a book by its back cover. At least, that's true in the case of More Servlets and JavaServer Pages. The book is divided into five sections. Part I consists of three chapters that ...
The final results of the Public Review Ballot for JSR 372 are in, and the latest JavaServer Faces specification (JSF 2.3) has been approved. The public review started near the end of January, and ...