A first look at JavaServer Faces, Part 1 - Java World In September 2002, the early access (EA) draft of the JavaServer
Faces specification was released under Java Specification Request
(JSR) 127. JavaServer Faces, with a well-defined request processing
lifecycle and a rich component hierarchy, will profoundly affect
the development of Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE)
applications. In Part 1 of this two-part series, David Geary
introduces JavaServer Faces and explores its fundamental concepts. In September 2002, the early access (EA) draft of the JavaServer
Faces specification was released under Java Specification Request
(JSR) 127. JavaServer Faces, with a well-defined request processing
lifecycle and a rich component hierarchy, will profoundly affect
the development of Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE)
applications. In Part 1 of this two-part series, David Gea editionenterprisefacesj2eejavajavaserverjspjstlstruts in Bokmärkesfältsmapp > Java > [JSF]with 2002accessbokmärkesfältsmappdraftearlyjavajsfseptember
This review gives a summary on current commercial JSF Frameworks that use Ajax to update the website. The frameworks Icefaces, Netadvantage and Quipukit will be compared by analyzing specific components to each other. Moreover, we will give you detailed information about positive and negative impressions and experiences we gained about them during the installation and using them in Bokmärkesfältsmapp > Java > Rich Componentswith ajaxbokmärkesfältsmappcomponentsframeworksjavajsfreviewrich
JavaServer Faces Technology JavaServer Faces technology simplifies building user interfaces for JavaServer applications. Developers of various skill levels can quickly build web applications by: assembling reusable UI components in a page; connecting these components to an application data source; and wiring client-generated events to server-side event handlers. JavaServer Faces technology simplifies building user interfaces for JavaServer applications. Developers of various skill levels can quickly build web applications by: assembling reusable UI components in a page; connecting these components to an application data source; and wiring client-generated events to server-side event handlers. in Bokmärkesfältsmapp > Java > [JSF]with bokmärkesfältsmappbuildingfacesjavajavaserverjsfsimplifiestechnology