Understanding JavaServer Pages Model 2
architecture - JavaWorld December
1999
Understanding JavaServer Pages Model 2
architecture - JavaWorld December
1999 |
Which JSP book serves up the best lesson?
Which JSP bookAs for Web servers/databases, just mentioning a server in the book is not sufficient to be listed here. |
Get disconnected with CachedRowSet , This allows for ResultSet s to be serialized, sent to remote clients, updated
The new J2EE RowSet implementation provides updateable disconnected ResultSets in your JSPs |
Add XML to your J2EE applications - JavaWorld February 2001
Integrate an XML presentation layer in the J2EE layered architecture |
Publish
Publish event-driven Web content with JSP custom tags |
Call JavaBean methods from JSP
Call JavaBean methods from JSP 2.0 pages |
Introducing the Portlet Specification, Part 1
Introducing the Get your feet wet with the specification's underlying terms and concepts |
JSP 2.0: The New Deal, Part 3
JSP 2.0: The New Deal, Part 3
More Flexible JSP Document Format Rules
The JSP specification supports two types of JSP pages: regular JSP pages containing any type of text or markup, and JSP Documents, which are well-formed XML documents; i.e., docum |
JSP 2.0: The New Deal, Part 4
JSP 2.0: The New Deal, Part 4
In this final part of the "JSP 2.0: The New Deal" series, we look at two new features that make it much easier to develop custom tag libraries: tag files and the new simplified tag-handler Java API. |
Creating EL-Aware Taglibs Using XDoclet
Creating EL-Aware Taglibs Using XDoclet
When the JSP Tag Extensions (also known as taglibs) first came out, the only option to pass dynamic values as tag attributes was using Request Time (RT) expressions. With the advent of JSTL 1.0, another option ha |
Advanced form processing using JSP
Processing HTML forms using servlets, or more often, CGI scripts, is one of the most common operations performed on the Web today. However, that JavaServer Pages (JSPs) can play a significant role in sophisticated form processing is a little-known secret. |
JSP (JavaServer Pages) is a standard for combining Java and HTML to provide dynamic content in web pages.
With JSP, you embed Java code in HTML using special JSP tags similar to HTML tags. You install the JSP page, which has a .jsp extension, into the WebLogic Server document root, just as you would a static HTML page. When WebLogic Server serves a JSP page.. |
Java Server Pages Dynamically Generated Web Content.
JavaServer PagesTM (JSP TM) technology allows Web developers and designers to rapidly develop and easily maintain, information-rich, dynamic Web pages that leverage existing business systems. |
alaJSP JSP-similar processor
It is yet another servlet based preprocessor. The common idea behind that line of the products (see ColdCafe site) is splitting static HTML presentation which done by designers and dynamic proceed developed by programmers. |
JSP Tutorial
Adding dynamic content via expressionsAs we saw in the previous section, any HTML file can be turned into a JSP file by changing its extension to .jsp. Of course, what makes JSP useful is the ability to embed Java. Put the following text in a file wit |
J2EE pathfinder: Implement JSP custom tags in five easy steps
JSP custom tags provide a standardized mechanism for separating presentation and business logic in a dynamic Web page, allowing page designers to focus on presentation while application developers code the back end. In this installment of J2EE pathfinder, |
Encapsulate reusable functionality in JSP tags
JavaServer Pages (JSP) are a great mechanism for delivering dynamic Web-based content. JSP provides a set of predefined tags, but you can also define your own tag extensions that encapsulate common functionality. |
This tutorial shows how to Combine the power of XPath and JSP tag libraries
In this article, we'll examine the XPath custom tag library for JSPs and see a tag collection that provides simple control constructs and a uniform attribute value substitution facility, all of which combine to reduce complexity and improve functionality. |
Caching Dynamic Content with JSP 2.0
Server-side caching is a powerful and popular technique for improving the performance of server-side applications. After all, why compute twice what you can compute once and hang on to? Andrei Cioroianu shows you how to exploit this technique in JSP 2.0. |
JSP FUNDAMENTALS
JSP FUNDAMENTALS
JSP FUNDAMENTALS
By: Hrishikesh Deshpande
Introduction :
JSP termed as Java Server Pages is a technology introduced by Sun Microsystems Inc. to develop the web application in more efficient way than Servlets. It has got many |
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