A code-intensive guide to using the Jakarta Struts Framework to build Java Web applications
Developing Web applications with Java became considerably easier with the advent of JavaServer Pages (JSP) and servlets. Unfortunately, when used for large-scale applications, JSPs have been less successful–– they can become bloated with code, resulting in applications that are slow and inefficient. Jakarta Struts helps provide the solution to this problem. Struts handles a number of specific tasks involved in controlling how servlets, EJBs, and other components work together. It also makes use of JSP custom tags to help developers create interactive, form-based applications.
James Goodwill has loaded each chapter with real-world code examples that show how to build applications using Jakarta Struts. Written for experienced Java programmers who need to learn how to use Struts to build enterprise-level applications, this book begins by examining the concepts and architecture of the Struts Framework of technologies. It then explains how to use
Struts to:
- Build JavaBean and model components
- Build view components
- Build controller components
- Access relational databases
- Work with Struts HTML-based forms
- Work with action mappings and deployment descriptors
- Build JavaBean objects using the Struts Digester
- Build internationalized Web applications
The companion Web site contains electronic versions of all code examples in the book, plus fully operating versions of the applications described in the book.
Wiley Computer Publishing. Timely. Practical. Reliable.
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Visit the companion Web site at www.wiley.com/compbooks/goodwill
About the Author
JAMES GOODWILL is the cofounder and Chief Technology Officer at Virtuas Solutions, LLC, located in Denver, Colorado. He has extensive experience in designing and architecting Java e-business applications. He currently leads Virtuas’s efforts to develop cutting-edge tools for J2EE e-business acceleration. He is also the author of Mastering JSP Custom Tags and Tag Libraries (Wiley), Developing Java Servlets, Pure JSP: JavaServer Pages, and Apache Jakarta-Tomcat, all of which provide complete coverage of technologies for designing and developing Java Web applications.