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Mastering JavaServer Faces 2.2

You're reading from   Mastering JavaServer Faces 2.2 Master the art of implementing user interfaces with JSF 2.2

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782176466
Length 578 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Anghel Leonard Anghel Leonard
Author Profile Icon Anghel Leonard
Anghel Leonard
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Dynamic Access to JSF Application Data through Expression Language (EL 3.0) FREE CHAPTER 2. Communication in JSF 3. JSF Scopes – Lifespan and Use in Managed Beans Communication 4. JSF Configurations Using XML Files and Annotations – Part 1 5. JSF Configurations Using XML Files and Annotations – Part 2 6. Working with Tabular Data 7. JSF and AJAX 8. JSF 2.2 – HTML5 and Upload 9. JSF State Management 10. JSF Custom Components 11. JSF 2.2 Resource Library Contracts – Themes 12. Facelets Templating A. The JSF Life Cycle
Index

JSF 2.2 is stateless


The notion of being stateless is pretty confusing, because every application must maintain some kind of state (for example, for runtime variables). Generically speaking, a stateless application will follow the rule of a state per request, which means that a state's lifecycle is the same as the request-response lifecycle. This is an important issue in web applications, where we need to use session/application scope that, obviously, breaks down the notion of stateless.

Even so, one of the most popular features of JSF 2.2 consists of stateless views (and is actually available starting with Version 2.1.19). The idea behind this concept assumes that JSF will not save/restore the view state between requests and will prefer to recreate the view state from the XHTML tags on every request. The goal is to seriously increase performances: the gain time used for the save/restore view state, more efficient usage of server memory, more support for clustered environments, and the prevention...

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