Book Image

JasperReports 3.5 for Java Developers

Book Image

JasperReports 3.5 for Java Developers

Overview of this book

Do you want to create easily understood, professional, and powerful reports from disordered, scattered data using a free, open source Java class library? If your answer is yes, this book on JasperReports is what you are looking for. JasperReports is the world's most popular embeddable Java open source reporting library, providing Java developers with the power to easily create rich print and web reports. The book has been fully updated to use JasperReports 3.5, the latest version of JasperReports. Previously accepted techniques that have now been deprecated have been replaced with their modern counterparts. All examples in the book have been updated to use XML schemas for report templates. Coverage of new data sources that JasperReports now supports has been added to the book. Additionally, JasperReports can now export reports to even more formats than before and exporting reports to these new formats is covered in this new edition of the book. This book shows you exactly how to get started, and develop the skills to get the most from JasperReports. It introduces you to the latest version of JasperReports, and gets you creating complex and elegant reports. The book steers you through each point of report setup, to creating, designing, formatting, and exporting reports with data from a wide range of data sources, and integrating JasperReports with other Java frameworks. Starting with the basics of adding reporting capabilities to your application and creating report templates, you will first see how to produce your reports through the use of JRXML files, custom ANT targets, and then preview them in both the web browser and the native browser of JasperReports. Getting data into your reports is the next step, and you will see how to get data from a range of data sources, not only databases, but XML files, and Java Objects, among others. You will create better looking reports with formatting and grouping, as well as adding graphical elements to your reports. You will export your reports to a range of different formats, including PDF and XML. Creating reports will be made even easier with a walkthrough of the iReport Designer visual designing tool. To round things off, you will see how to integrate your reports with other Java frameworks, using Spring or Hibernate to get data for the report, and Java Server Faces or Struts for presenting the report. All examples have been updated to use XML schemas. New export formats, such as OpenDocument Text, and new data sources now supported by JasperReports are now covered in this updated edition.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
JasperReports 3.5 for Java Developers
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface
Index

Summary


The chapter started with integrating JasperReports with Hibernate by writing embedded report queries in the HQL. JasperReports with HQL queries is similar to reports containing SQL queries except that the language attribute of the <queryString> element must be set to hql. Next, we saw how to integrate JasperReports with the JPA. As with Hibernate, JPA integration requires that the language attribute of the <queryString> element be modified. For JPA, the value of this attribute must be set to ejbql. Following our discussion of JPA, we saw how to integrate JasperReports with the Spring framework by taking advantage of Spring's built-in support for JasperReports integration.

The chapter also dealt with JSF and JasperReports integration and illustrated how to write backing beans that fill a report and display it in the browser. Finally, the chapter illustrated the integration of JasperReports with Struts by explaining how to write action classes that fill a report and display...