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Practical JSF in Java EE 8

Web Applications ​in Java for the Enterprise

Michael Müller

$116.95   $93.60

Paperback

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English
APress
30 May 2018
Master the Java EE 8 and JSF (JavaServer Faces) APIs and web framework with this practical, projects-driven guide to web development. This book combines theoretical background with a practical approach by building four real-world applications. By developing these JSF web applications, you'll take a tour through the other Java EE technologies such as JPA, CDI, Security, WebSockets, and more.

In Practical JSF in Java EE 8, you will learn to use the JavaServer Faces web framework in Java EE 8 to easily construct a web-based user interface from a set of reusable components. Next, you add JSF event handling and then link to a database, persist data, and add security and the other bells and whistles that the Java EE 8 platform has to offer.

After reading this book you will have a good foundation in Java-based web development and will have increased your proficiency in sophisticated Java EE 8 web development using the JSF framework.

What You Will Learn

Use the Java EE 8 and the

JavaServer Faces APIs to build Java-based web applications through four

practical real-world case studies Process user input with JSF

and the expression language by building a calculator application Persist data using JSF

templating and Java Persistence to manage an inventory of books Create and manage an alumni

database using JSF, Ajax, web services and Java EE 8's

security features.

 Who This Book Is For

Those new to Java EE 8 and JSF. Some prior experience with Java is recommended.

By:  
Imprint:   APress
Country of Publication:   United States
Edition:   1st ed.
Dimensions:   Height: 254mm,  Width: 178mm, 
Weight:   9.366kg
ISBN:   9781484230299
ISBN 10:   1484230299
Pages:   480
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Part I: TinyCalculator Project.- 1. TinyCalculator.- 2. Foundations.- 3. JavaServer Faces.- 4. Expression Language.- 5. HTML Friendly Markup.- 6. Configuration files.- 7. Testing with Selenium.- 8. Recap TinyCalculator.- Part II: Books Project.- 9. Preparing for Java EE 8.- 10. Introducing the Books Application.- 11. Starting the Books App.- 12. Java Persistence API.- 13. JSF Templating.- 14. Becoming International.- 15. Bean Validation.- 16. Contexts and Dependency Injection.- 17. Conversation Scope.- 18. Links.- 19. Responsive Design.- 20. Summary and Perspective.- Part III: Intermezzo Project.- 21. Intermezzo.- 22. JSF Lifecycle revised.- 23. Repetitive Structures.- 23. JSF and BeanValidation.- Part IV: Alumni Project.- 24. Alumni.- 25. Validation.- 26. Ajax.- 27. Building Composite Components.- 28. Secure Passwords.- 29. Data Facade.- 30. Activation Mail.- 31. Cleanup (or Scheduled Tasks).- 32. Authentication and Authorization.- 33. Account Handling.- 34. Classroom Chat (WebSockets).- 35. Changing Look and Feel.- 36. Constants Handling.- Afterword.- Appendix A.- Appendix B.- Appendix C.- Appendix D.- Appendix E.

Michael Müller is an IT professional with more than 30 years of experience including about 25 years in the healthcare sector. During this time, he has worked in different areas, especially project and product management, consulting, and software development. He gained international knowledge not only by targeting international markets, but also by leading external teams (from Eastern Europe and India). Currently, he is the head of software development at the German DRG institute [http://inek.org]. In this role, he is responsible for Web applications as well as other Java and .NET projects.Web projects are preferably built with Java technologies such as JSF with the help of supporting languages like JavaScript. Michael is a professional JSF user and a member of the JSR 344 and JSR 372 (JSF) expert groups. Due to his community activities he was invited to join the NetBeans Dream Team and became a member January 2016.

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