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The designers of JSF aren't oblivous to the existence of other frameworks. As a consequence, JSF was designed
so that it can be integrated with the plethora of other we... |
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Currently, Sun is responsible for the reference implementation, which will work with any standard servlet container. They
also support JSF in... |
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The JSF reference implementation includes basic examples, and most JSF books have examples.
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Now that JSF has been released, it's definitely a viable choice for any new web development project. It's quite a powerful web user interface framework with a lot... |
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Since JSF is focused on user interface components and the view layer, it overlaps with Struts' functionality but doesn't replace it. For existing and f... |
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Currently, JSF has a few less standard components than Web Forms. JSF includes basic input and output components and a powerful editable DataGrid,... |
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Even though you can access JavaBeans stored in the session, request, or application scopes
through normal Servlet API objects like... |
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JSF was developed through the Java Community Process, and like any other Java Specification Request (JSR),
there are two primary pi... |
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Yes, you can. JSF has Action methods that handle user commands, such as clicking on a button or
a hyperlink. These Actions can be a... |
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Let's face it, there are a lot of Java web "frameworks" on the market.
They can be broken up into two primary camps: action and c... |
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JavaServer Faces (JSF) is a framework for building web-based user interfaces in Java. Like Swing, it
provides a set of standard widgets (... |
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All Faces applications are standard Java web applications, as defined by the
Servlet API. This means that they require an installed... |
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Yes, it does. With some IDEs, you can get the features you expect with visual Swing or Visual Basic editors.
This includes property editors, vis... |
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JSF 1.0 is not part of Java Enterprise Edition (Java EE). JSF 1.2, however, is part of Java EE 5, and JSF 2.0 will be part of Java EE 6.
Thi... |
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