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Java EE 7 Web Application Development

You're reading from   Java EE 7 Web Application Development Develop Java enterprise applications to meet the emerging digital standards using Java EE 7

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782176640
Length 486 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Peter Pilgrim Peter Pilgrim
Author Profile Icon Peter Pilgrim
Peter Pilgrim
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Digital Java EE 7 FREE CHAPTER 2. JavaServer Faces Lifecycle 3. Building JSF Forms 4. JSF Validation and AJAX 5. Conversations and Journeys 6. JSF Flows and Finesse 7. Progressive JavaScript Frameworks and Modules 8. AngularJS and Java RESTful Services 9. Java EE MVC Framework A. JSF with HTML5, Resources, and Faces Flows B. From Request to Response C. Agile Performance – Working inside Digital Teams D. Curated References Index

The MVC design pattern


The MVC design describes a set of design patterns that aim to separate the concerns of a user interface from the application logic that semantically binds them. The Model describes the business logic. The View denotes the presentation—the abstract surface that the user senses and also interacts with. The Controller denotes the component that handles the interaction between the model and view. The original idea of MVC stemmed from Trygve Reenskaug, who introduced the concept in the Smalltalk programming language during the 1970s. The pattern was subsequently implemented and popularized in the Smalltalk-80 before it was adopted in the wider software engineering community. MVC is famous for its ideas about the division of labor and the separation of responsibilities between the components.

We call it MVC patterns because the plural term describes a set of related derivatives of the classic pattern as group patterns.

The MVC pattern has subsequently evolved, giving rise...

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