Book Image

Vaadin 7 UI Design By Example: Beginner's Guide

Book Image

Vaadin 7 UI Design By Example: Beginner's Guide

Overview of this book

Vaadin is a mature, open-source, and powerful Java framework used to build modern web applications in plain Java. Vaadin brings back the fun of programming UI interfaces to the web universe. No HTML, no CSS, no JavaScript, no XML. Vaadin lets you implement web user interfaces using an object oriented model, similar to desktop technologies such as Swing and AWT. Vaadin 7 UI Design By Example: Beginner's Guide is an engaging guide that will teach you how to develop web applications in minutes. With this book, you will Develop useful applications and learn basics of Java web development. By the end of the book you will be able to build Java web applications that look fantastic. The book begins with simple examples using the most common Vaadin UI components and quickly move towards more complex applications as components are introduced chapter-by-chapter. Vaadin 7 UI Design By Example: Beginner's Guide shows you how to use Eclipse, Netbeans, and Maven to create Vaadin projects. It then demonstrates how to use labels, text fields, buttons, and other input components. Once you get a grasp of the basic usage of Vaadin, the book explains Vaadin theory to prepare you for the rest of the trip that will enhance your knowledge of Vaadin UI components and customization techniques.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Vaadin 7 UI Design By Example Beginner's Guide
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Summary


We learned some classic, old-school web development stuff in this chapter. Look at what we have covered:

  • We met four out-of-the-box Vaadin themes.

  • We learned how Vaadin allows us to define our own themes using Sass.

  • We learned some basics of CSS.

  • We learned how Sass extends CSS by adding variables, nesting, and mixins.

  • We learned that Vaadin UI components are rendered as HTML elements with proper CSS classes according to the component's type.

  • We learned how to use inspect HTML in Firefox and Chrome.

  • We learned how to create a new Vaadin theme.

  • We saw several examples of customizing some of the most common Vaadin UI components.

At this point you must be quite proficient with Vaadin. You have used most Vaadin UI components, you know how Vaadin data model works, and you can use some basic CSS and Sass to customize your components and create new themes.

The next chapter is going to be the perfect closure for our Vaadin trip: We'll learn how to develop custom components. See you there!