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The Definitive Guide to Jakarta Faces in Jakarta EE 10 = Building Java-Based Enterprise Web Applications /
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
The Definitive Guide to Jakarta Faces in Jakarta EE 10/ by Bauke Scholtz, Arjan Tijms.
Reminder of title:
Building Java-Based Enterprise Web Applications /
Author:
Scholtz, Bauke.
other author:
Tijms, Arjan.
Description:
XIII, 527 p. 57 illus.online resource. :
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
Subject:
Java (Computer program language). -
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4842-7310-4
ISBN:
9781484273104
The Definitive Guide to Jakarta Faces in Jakarta EE 10 = Building Java-Based Enterprise Web Applications /
Scholtz, Bauke.
The Definitive Guide to Jakarta Faces in Jakarta EE 10
Building Java-Based Enterprise Web Applications /[electronic resource] :by Bauke Scholtz, Arjan Tijms. - 2nd ed. 2022. - XIII, 527 p. 57 illus.online resource.
1. History -- 2. From Zero To Hello World -- 3. Components -- 4. Form Components -- 5. Validation and Conversion -- 6. Output Components -- 7. Facelets Templating -- 8. Backing Beans -- 9. Exception Handling -- 10. WebSocket Push -- 11. Custom Components -- 12. Search Expressions -- 13. Security -- 14. Localization -- 15. Extensions.
Learn and master the new features in the new Eclipse Jakarta Faces (formerly JavaServer Faces or JSF) web framework in this definitive guide written by two of the driving forces of the Faces project and the co-creators of the OmniFaces library. Authors Bauke Scholtz and Arjan Tijms take you through real-world examples that demonstrate how these new features are used with other APIs in Jakarta EE. You’ll see the new and exciting ways Jakarta Faces applications can use to communicate between a client and a server, such as using WebSockets, invoking bean methods directly from Ajax, executing client-side JavaScript when Ajax calls complete, and more Along the way you’ll broaden your knowledge of Faces components and web APIs best practices, and learn a great deal about the internals of Faces and the design decisions that have been made when building the Faces API. For example, you’ll see what artefacts are now CDI injectable, how CDI changed Faces internally, and what some of the caveats are when working with the CDI versions of a Faces artefact. Furthermore, you'll build an example application from scratch. After reading The Definitive Guide to Jakarta Faces in Jakarta EE 10, you'll be ready to build your own efficient and secure web applications. You will: Leverage the new features in Jakarta Faces in Jakarta EE in your existing applications Integrate Faces and CDI Use the brand new Component Search Expression framework, which enables you to more easily locate components from your template Extend the Component Search Expression framework with your own search operators Work with the different ways of mapping requests to Faces, make your application use extension-less URLs, and programmatically inspect which resources are present in your application Master the best practices for web application development and see which are obsolete.
ISBN: 9781484273104
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-1-4842-7310-4doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
686374
Java (Computer program language).
LC Class. No.: QA76.73.J38
Dewey Class. No.: 005.133
The Definitive Guide to Jakarta Faces in Jakarta EE 10 = Building Java-Based Enterprise Web Applications /
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1. History -- 2. From Zero To Hello World -- 3. Components -- 4. Form Components -- 5. Validation and Conversion -- 6. Output Components -- 7. Facelets Templating -- 8. Backing Beans -- 9. Exception Handling -- 10. WebSocket Push -- 11. Custom Components -- 12. Search Expressions -- 13. Security -- 14. Localization -- 15. Extensions.
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Learn and master the new features in the new Eclipse Jakarta Faces (formerly JavaServer Faces or JSF) web framework in this definitive guide written by two of the driving forces of the Faces project and the co-creators of the OmniFaces library. Authors Bauke Scholtz and Arjan Tijms take you through real-world examples that demonstrate how these new features are used with other APIs in Jakarta EE. You’ll see the new and exciting ways Jakarta Faces applications can use to communicate between a client and a server, such as using WebSockets, invoking bean methods directly from Ajax, executing client-side JavaScript when Ajax calls complete, and more Along the way you’ll broaden your knowledge of Faces components and web APIs best practices, and learn a great deal about the internals of Faces and the design decisions that have been made when building the Faces API. For example, you’ll see what artefacts are now CDI injectable, how CDI changed Faces internally, and what some of the caveats are when working with the CDI versions of a Faces artefact. Furthermore, you'll build an example application from scratch. After reading The Definitive Guide to Jakarta Faces in Jakarta EE 10, you'll be ready to build your own efficient and secure web applications. You will: Leverage the new features in Jakarta Faces in Jakarta EE in your existing applications Integrate Faces and CDI Use the brand new Component Search Expression framework, which enables you to more easily locate components from your template Extend the Component Search Expression framework with your own search operators Work with the different ways of mapping requests to Faces, make your application use extension-less URLs, and programmatically inspect which resources are present in your application Master the best practices for web application development and see which are obsolete.
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