Book Image

Apache MyFaces 1.2 Web Application Development

Book Image

Apache MyFaces 1.2 Web Application Development

Overview of this book

Hypes and trends (such as Web 2.0) cause a change in the requirements for user interfaces every now and then. While a lot of frameworks are capable of meeting those changing requirements, it often means you as a developer need in-depth knowledge of web standards, such as XHTML and JavaScript. A framework like Apache MyFaces that hides all details of how the page is rendered at the client and at the same time offers a rich set of tools and building blocks could save you a lot of time, not only when you're building a brand new application but also when you're adapting an existing application to meet new user interface requirements.This book will teach you everything you need to know to build appealing web interfaces with Apache MyFaces and maintain your code in a pragmatic way. It describes all the steps that are involved in building a user interface with Apache MyFaces. This includes building templates and composition components with Facelets, using all sorts of specialized components from the Tomahawk, Trinidad, and Tobago component sets and adding validation with MyFaces Extensions Validator.The book uses a step-by-step approach and contains a lot of tips based on experience of the MyFaces libraries in real-world projects. Throughout the book an example scenario is used to work towards a fully functional application when the book is finished.This step-by-step guide will help you to build a fully functional and powerful application.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Apache MyFaces 1.2
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
Preface
Trinidad Tags
Trinidad Text Keys
Default JSF Error Messages
ExtVal Default Error Messages

Summary


In this chapter, we learned about the various components that Tomahawk offers. We saw that the extended versions of the standard components are not very interesting any more, as most of the problems that the extra attributes try to solve have been solved in JSF 1.2 or can be resolved in a more elegant way by using Facelets. We also saw some pretty neat extra components that Tomahawk adds. Although these extra components are not designed to be a coherent set, some are very useful. This chapter showed ways of using some of the more interesting Tomahawk components in conjunction with Facelets.

We encountered several issues, and noticed that some components are still unfinished. Tomahawk was one of the first open source component libraries for JSF, and has been around for a couple of years. However, there does not seem to be much activity on the Tomahawk project lately. It will be interesting to see if the Tomahawk project will be able to solve most issues, tie up the loose ends, make...