Book Image

JSF 1.2 Components

By : IAN HLAVATS
Book Image

JSF 1.2 Components

By: IAN HLAVATS

Overview of this book

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.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
JSF 1.2 Components
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface

Laying out components with panels


The ICEfaces component library also includes a set of panels that support a wide range of user interface layouts. Let's look at a few of these panel components to gain a better appreciation of the power of ICEfaces' layout capabilities.

Working with a border layout

Swing/AWT programmers will be familiar with the BorderLayout class. This class provides an interesting layout manager for the Java GUI toolkit that subdivides a panel into five distinct regions. These regions are known as the North, South, East, West, and Center regions.

The<ice:panelBorder> tag supports the BorderLayout layout algorithm within a JSF application. Each region is represented by a facet with the same name as shown in the following example.

<ice:panelBorder cellspacing="2" cellpadding="2" align="center" height="200px" width="400px">
<f:facet name="north">
<ice:outputText value="North" />
</f:facet>
<f:facet name="west">
<ice:outputText value...