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Java EE 8 Development with Eclipse. - Third Edition

You're reading from  Java EE 8 Development with Eclipse. - Third Edition

Product type Book
Published in Jun 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788833776
Pages 596 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters close

Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
1. Introducing JEE and Eclipse 2. Creating a Simple JEE Web Application 3. Source Control Management in Eclipse 4. Creating JEE Database Applications 5. Unit Testing 6. Debugging the JEE Application 7. Creating JEE Applications with EJB 8. Creating Web Applications with Spring MVC 9. Creating Web Services 10. Asynchronous Programming with JMS 11. Java CPU Profiling and Memory Tracking 12. Microservices 13. Deploying JEE Applications in the Cloud 14. Securing JEE Applications 1. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

JavaServer Faces


When working with JSP, we saw that it is not a good idea to mix scriptlets with the HTML markup. We solved this problem by using JavaBean. JavaServer Faces takes this design further. In addition to supporting JavaBeans, JSF provides built-in tags for HTML user controls, which are context aware, can perform validation, and can preserve the state between requests. We will now create the login application using JSF:

  1. Create a dynamic web application in Eclipse; let's name it LoginJSFApp. In the last page of the wizard, make sure that you check the Generate web.xml deployment descriptor box.
  2. Download JSF libraries from https://maven.java.net/content/repositories/releases/org/glassfish/javax.faces/2.2.9/javax.faces-2.2.9.jar and copy them to the WEB-INF/lib folder in your project.
  3. JSF follows the MVC pattern. In the MVC pattern, the code to generate user interface (view) is separate from the container of the data (model). The controller acts as the interface between the view and...
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