Alternative deployment
methods, Part 1: Beyond applets - JavaWorld May
2000
Alternative deployment
methods, Part 1: Beyond applets - JavaWorld May
2000 |
Device programming with MIDP, Part
1 - JavaWorld
January
2001
Device programming with MIDP, Part
1 - JavaWorld
January
2001 |
A first look at JavaServer Faces, Part I
A first look at JavaServer Faces, Part Learn how to implement Web-based user interfaces with JSF |
A first look at JavaServer Faces, Part
2
A first look at JavaServer Faces, Part
2 |
Introducing the Portlet Specification, Part 1
Introducing the Get your feet wet with the specification's underlying terms and concepts |
JavaServer Faces, redux
JavaServer Faces, redux |
Introduction to JavaServer Faces
This article is meant to acquaint the reader with JavaServer Faces, commonly known as JSF. JSF technology simplifies building the user interface for web applications. It does this by providing a higher-level framework for working with your web app, repres |
Improving JSF by Dumping JSP
Improving JSF by Dumping JSP
After a long wait and high expectations, JavaServer Faces (JSF) 1.0 was finally released on March 11, 2004. JSF introduces an event-driven component model for web application development, similar in spirit and function to t |
nexB - IT assets and applications autodiscovery and management
Open By Design
The nexB vision is to build business applications that are Open by Design(tm). Open by Design means that the design for business applications is as open as the source code. In fact, all phases of software development need to be open from d |
Creating JSF Custom Components
Creating JSF Custom Components
This article illustrates how to build custom components for use in web applications based on JavaServer Faces (JSF). While JSF comes with a standard set of components, one of the most-publicized features is the easy additio |
Put JSF to work
Build a real-world Web application with JavaServer Faces, the Spring Framework, and Hibernate
Summary
Building a real-world Web application using JavaServer Faces is not a trivial task. This article shows you how to integrate JSF, the Spring Framewor |
IberAgents
Introduction
IberAgents is a web application framework that enables the creation of SOAP-interoperable components in Java, with life cycle management and remote configuration. Development started in 2001; we now have a mature, solid open-source platform |
Handling Events in JavaServer Faces, Part 1
In this excerpt from the book, author Hans Bergsten looks at the JSF event model, using examples to help explain what\'s going on "under the hood." |
Unclog the server bottleneck with active containers.
In server-side control architectures such as Java ServerFaces (JSF) or Struts, a majority of the control events must be handled on the server side to update the state of the control. For every user event, the entire page data is sent back to the server... |
Integrating Struts, Tiles, and JavaServer Faces
Integrating Struts, Tiles, and JavaServer Faces. Bring the power, flexibility, and manageability of the three technologies together. |
Chat Transcript: JSP 2.1 Technology and JSF 1.2 Technology
The next release of JavaServer Pages (JSP) technology, JSP 2.1, and the next release of JavaServer Faces (JSF) technology, JSF 1.2, are designed to improve the alignment of these two technologies in the area of expression language, and to enhance their ea |
Mock Objects in Unit Tests
EasyMock is a well-known mock tool that can create a mock object for a given interface at runtime. |
Oracle answers on Linux
The world's business software giant offers answers to the 10 most frequently asked questions about Linux. |
SDE for Eclipse
[[http://www.visual-paradigm.com/sdeec.php][The SDE 2.0 for Eclipse (SDE-EC)]] is a powerful, yet the most easy-to-use UML Modelling plugin for Eclipse. |
Running JavaServer Faces Technology-Based Portlets on Sun Java System Portal Server 6 2005Q1
You can extend the framework based on JavaServer Faces technology and then run a JSR 168-compliant portlet on Sun Java System Portal Server 6. This article describes the setup procedures, offers sample code, and summarizes the known issues. |
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