Jakarta struts
Programming Jakarta Struts, 2nd Edition By Chuck Cavaness Publisher Pub Date ISBN Pages : O'Reilly : June 2004 : 0‐596‐00651‐9 : 470
If you want to use the Struts Framework to its fullest potential, this is the book for you. Programming Jakarta Struts, 2nd Edition covers everything the successful earlier edition did as well as plenty more: now fully up to date with Struts 1.1, this edition covers the latest material on tag libraries and the new JavaServerFaces (JSF) APIs and even includes all‐new chapters on JSF, JSTL/EL, and security.
Programming Jakarta Struts, 2nd Edition By Chuck Cavaness Publisher Pub Date ISBN Pages : O'Reilly : June 2004 : 0‐596‐00651‐9 : 470
Copyright Preface Organization Conventions Used in This Book Using Code Examples Comments and Questions Acknowledgments Chapter 1. Introduction Section 1.1. A Brief History of the Web Section 1.2. What Are Java Servlets? Section 1.3. JavaServer Pages Section 1.4. JSP Model 1 and Model 2 Architectures Section 1.5. Why Is Model‐View‐Controller So Important? Section 1.6. What Is a Framework? Section 1.7. Alternatives to Struts Chapter 2. Inside the Web Tier Section 2.1. An Architecture Overview Section 2.2. The HTTP Request/Response Phase Section 2.3. Struts and Scope Section 2.4. Using URL Parameters Section 2.5. Forward Versus Redirect Chapter 3. Overview of the Struts Framework Section 3.1. A Banking Account Example Section 3.2. Looking at the Big Picture Section 3.3. Struts Controller Components Section 3.4. Struts Model Components Section 3.5. Struts View Components Section 3.6. Multiple Application Support Section 3.7. Summary Chapter 4. Configuring Struts Applications Section 4.1. The Storefront Application Section 4.2. What Is a Web Application? Section 4.3. The Web Application Directory Structure Section 4.4. The Web Application Deployment Descriptor Section 4.5. Configuring the web.xml File for Struts Section 4.6. The Struts Configuration File Section 4.7. The Digester Component Section 4.8. The Struts Console Tool Section 4.9. Reloading the Configuration Files Chapter 5. Struts Controller Components Section 5.1. The Controller Mechanism Section 5.2. The Utilities Classes Chapter 6. Struts Model Components Section 6.1. The "M" in MVC Section 6.2. What Is a Business Object?
Section 6.3. PersistenceSection 6.4. What Does Struts Offer for the Model? Chapter 7. Struts View Components Section 7.1. What Is a View? Section 7.2. What Are ActionForms? Section 7.3. Using ActionErrors Section 7.4. Performing Presentation Validation Section 7.5. Using the DynaActionForm Class Section 7.6. Looking Ahead to JavaServer Faces Chapter 8. JSP Custom Tag Libraries Section 8.1. Custom Tags Overview Section 8.2. Tag Libraries Included with Struts Section 8.3. Using JavaBeans with Struts Tags Section 8.4. Struts HTML Tags Section 8.5. Logic Tags Section 8.6. Bean Tags Section 8.7. Nested Tags Section 8.8. Other Useful Tag Libraries Section 8.9. The JSP Standard Tag Library (JSTL) Chapter 9. Extending the Struts Framework ...
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