Today's web developers need powerful tools to deliver richer, faster, and smoother web experiences. JavaServer Faces includes powerful, feature-rich, Ajax-enabled UI components that provide all the functionality needed to build web applications in a Web 2.0 world. It's the perfect way to build rich, interactive, and "Web 2.0-style" Java web apps.
This book provides a comprehensive introduction to the most popular JSF components available today and demonstrate step-by-step how to build increasingly sophisticated JSF user interfaces with standard JSF, Facelets, Apache Tomahawk/Trinidad, ICEfaces, JBoss Seam, JBoss RichFaces/Ajax4jsf, and JSF 2.0 components. JSF 1.2 Components is both an excellent starting point for new JSF developers, and a great reference and “how to” guide for experienced JSF professionals.
This book progresses logically from an introduction to standard JSF HTML, and JSF Core components to advanced JSF UI development. As you move through the book, you will learn how to build composite views using Facelets tags, implement common web development tasks using Tomahawk components, and add Ajax capabilities to your JSF user interface with ICEfaces components. You will also learn how to solve the complex web application development challenges with the JBoss Seam framework. At the end of the book, you will be introduced to the new and up-coming JSF component libraries that will provide a road map of the future JSF technologies.
Develop a database-enabled Java EE application using JSF, Enterprise JavaBeans™ (EJB3), the Java Persistence API (JPA), and the JBoss Seam framework
Send data from a modal dialog window to a JSF page using the Apache Trinidad dialog framework
Render pie charts, bar graphs, and line graphs using the Apache Trinidad and ICEfaces charting components
Write custom converters and validators, declare them in faces-config.xml, and register them on other UI components with the standard JSF Core tag library
Use standard JavaServer Faces components to implement a number of common web development tasks, such as rendering forms containing simple UI components and accepting and validating input from uses
Enhance presentation tier development in a JSF application using the Facelets view definition framework
Display a Microsoft Outlook style appointment schedule using the Apache Tomahawk schedule component
Implement user interface security with the Java Authentication and Authorization Service (JAAS) and Apache Tomahawk components
Add sophisticated Ajax behavior such as visual effects and asynchronous polling to your user interfaces with the ICEfaces component library
Discover new and up-and-coming JSF component libraries, and gain a better understanding of the JSF ecosystem and technology road map[/list]
It adopts an example-driven approach focused on solving common web application development tasks using a wide range of JSF components from today's most popular JSF component libraries.
Each chapter covers a different JSF component library and includes dozens of examples complete with Java source code listings, JSF markup, screenshots, and developer tips.
A working knowledge of Java classes, interfaces, annotations, and generics, Java Collections Framework, JavaBeans API, Java Database Connectivity (JDBC), Java Servlets/JSP, Java Authentication and Authorization Service (JAAS), Java Persistence API (JPA), Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB), the Apache Tomcat web container, the JBoss AS 4.2 application server is assumed. Experienced JSF professionals will also find this book useful as a quick reference and 'how to' guide.