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Jakarta EE Application Development

You're reading from   Jakarta EE Application Development Build enterprise applications with Jakarta CDI, RESTful web services, JSON Binding, persistence, and security

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835085264
Length 316 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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David R. Heffelfinger David R. Heffelfinger
Author Profile Icon David R. Heffelfinger
David R. Heffelfinger
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Introduction to Jakarta EE FREE CHAPTER 2. Chapter 2: Contexts and Dependency Injection 3. Chapter 3: Jakarta RESTful Web Services 4. Chapter 4: JSON Processing and JSON Binding 5. Chapter 5: Microservices Development with Jakarta EE 6. Chapter 6: Jakarta Faces 7. Chapter 7: Additional Jakarta Faces Features 8. Chapter 8: Object Relational Mapping with Jakarta Persistence 9. Chapter 9: WebSockets 10. Chapter 10: Securing Jakarta EE Applications 11. Chapter 11: Servlet Development and Deployment 12. Chapter 12: Jakarta Enterprise Beans 13. Chapter 13: Jakarta Messaging 14. Chapter 14: Web Services with Jakarta XML Web Services 15. Chapter 15: Putting it All Together 16. Index 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Jakarta Faces HTML5 support

HTML5 is the latest version of the HTML specification. It includes several improvements over previous versions of HTML. Jakarta Faces includes several features to make Faces pages work nicely with HTML5. Jakarta Faces support for HTML5 includes the ability to develop our Jakarta Faces pages in HTML5 without using Faces-specific tags, along with the ability to add arbitrary HTML5 attributes to our Jakarta Faces pages.

HTML5-friendly markup

Through the use of pass-through elements, we can develop our Faces pages using HTML5, as opposed to using Faces-specific tags. Using HTML5 to develop our pages has the advantage that we can preview how our page renders in the browser without having to deploy our application to a Jakarta EE runtime. We can simply open the page in a web browser.

To do this, we need to specify at least one of the element attributes using the jakarta.faces XML namespace. The following example demonstrates this approach in action:

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