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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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Toc

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

Composite custom components


JSF also features custom components that you, the developer, can write. In fact, the instant secure lending example uses one: the top header of each page view in the conversation. It is a hint that informs the customer where he or she is in the flow. I've called it the WorkerBannerComponent.

In JSF, a custom component describes a reusable piece of page content that may insert into a Facelet view many times over. A custom component may or may not have a backing bean, and it may or may not group together a set of properties into a form. As mentioned in Chapter 2, JavaServer Faces Lifecycle, we can use custom components to build repeated page content that takes advantage of the latest HTML frameworks such as Bootstrap and that abstracts away the deeper details. Businesses can use custom components to establish a common structure for the page content and markup.

Components with XHTML

The WorkerBannerComponent is a backing bean for the logic of the display header, which...

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