MagPortal.com   Clustify - document clustering
 Home  |  Newsletter  |  My Articles  |  My Account  |  Help 
Similar Articles
JavaWorld
February 2002
Julien Mercay & Gilbert Bouzeid
Boost Struts with XSLT and XML Struts is an innovative server-side Java framework designed to build Web applications. This article introduces the processing model underlying Struts, describes the Struts framework itself, and presents Model 2X, which enhances Struts... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
November 2000
Lanette Poe & Michael Ball
DSML gives you the power to access your LDAP information as XML These days, directory services and XML form the backbone of good data management. With Directory Service Markup Language (DSML) -- a new standard for representing directory information as XML -- directory services can take advantage of XML's most powerful features... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
February 2002
Victor Okunev
Generate JavaBean classes dynamically with XSLT For some projects, you need a more flexible business object structure. This article lays a foundation for a simple framework to build truly adaptive systems, saving you hours of routine programming... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
December 5, 2003
Borislav Iordanov
Dynamic server includes with local runtime context This article shows how to achieve true black-box reuse of frontend logic in the form of JSP pages or Java servlets, by wrapping the servlet request object and effectively creating a local runtime context for an included resource. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
December 2002
David Geary
A first look at JavaServer Faces, Part 2 JavaServer Faces, with a well-defined request processing lifecycle and a rich component hierarchy, will profoundly affect the development of J2EE applications. Part 1 of this two-part series introduced JavaServer Faces and explored its fundamental concepts. Part 2 examines more advanced concepts such as custom validation, internationalization, and custom component implementation. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
February 2001
Steven Gould
Servlets in Apache Tomcat and BEA Systems' WebLogic Server This article reviews the steps involved in developing servlets, then describes how to take the servlet and create a Web application -- in both expanded format and as a WAR. He illustrates how to deploy the Web application in Apache Tomcat -- a widely used, freeware servlet container... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
June 2001
Brian R.J. Heumann
Personalize your Website with skins You can give your users control over your Website's look and feel by exploiting user profiles and factoring out key visual design elements into skins. This article demonstrates a basic skin server and shows how you can use that server to begin personalizing your JSP-based Website. (1,000 words) mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
September 2000
Andre Tost
XML document processing in Java using XPath and XSLT The XSLT and XPath standards provide a way of handling certain problems that is more elegant and efficient than simply using the DOM API. In fact, using DOM, XSLT, and XPath together, applying each to different problems, will lead to the best code... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
February 2003
Steve Small
JSP Standard Tag Library eases Webpage development The release of JavaServer Pages Standard Tag Library is a significant development for JSP/servlet developers. With an expression language and a set of four powerful, easy-to-learn standard tag libraries, JSTL is likely to soon become the dominant approach for implementing dynamic, Java-based Websites. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
January 2, 2004
Allen Holub
More on getters and setters This article provides one of several possible programmatic solutions to the get/set-elimination problem. In particular, it demonstrates how to construct both Web-based and client-side user interfaces without exposing your object's implementation to the entire program. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
January 2001
Vincent DiBartolo
FreeMarker: An open alternative to JSP You can place FreeMarker tags in text files of any format and are not married to any server-side architecture or solution. FreeMarker is easily extensible, and you can quickly build a library of reusable custom objects that will live longer than the technology solutions that utilize them... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
November 14, 2003
Allen Holub
Create client-side user interfaces in HTML, Part 2 This "Create Client-Side User Interfaces in HTML" series continues by examining the HTMLPane sources. Part 2 offers examples of how to customize the JEditorPane to support custom tags and also provides an extended description of the Factory Method design pattern. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
May 23, 2003
Andrei Cioroianu
Call JavaBean methods from JSP 2.0 pages JavaServer Pages (JSP) 2.0 introduced many new features that will change the way you develop Java Web applications. This article walks you through three examples that show how to separate the JSP/HTML markup from the Java code using the new expression language (EL) and developing custom tags with dynamic attributes. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
October 2002
Abulsorour & Visveswaran
Business process automation made easy with Java, Part 2 Design options for rule engine integration, data synchronization considerations, workflow engine integration, and some best-practice quality-of-service considerations. Also, emerging data interchange standards that enable a more flexible solution mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
January 2001
Milan Adamovic
Process JSPs effectively with JavaBeans The JavaServer Pages Model II concept is well known. The basic idea is that the presentation should be separated from the processing code. This article offers an effective, reusable design for moving the dynamic content, processing, and validation from a JavaServer Page to a corresponding JavaBean... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
August 2000
Simon Brown
Encapsulate reusable functionality in JSP tags JavaServer Pages (JSP) are a great mechanism for delivering dynamic Web-based content. This article will show how easy it is to build, deploy, and use your own custom JSP tag, using the Servlet/JSP reference implementation, Tomcat. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
December 2001
Taylor Cowan
XSLT blooms with Java XSLT (Extensible Stylesheet Language Transformation) offers an excellent vehicle for styling XML documents as HTML. However, it shows some weakness when the transformation requires extensive logic. When XSLT languages fail to complete the job, you can extend your stylesheets with Java classes and take advantage of both languages' features. This article demonstrates how to extend XSLT with Java. You will learn how to instantiate and invoke methods on Java objects from within an XSLT stylesheet. The article also demonstrates how XML nodes are passed to Java classes and returned back to the stylesheet for further processing. mark for My Articles similar articles
New Architect
January 2003
Paul Sholtz
Instant Update Making your data and spreadsheets Web viewable through MVC: The Model-View-Controller (MVC) pattern is an established and well-understood software design method. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
September 2002
David Geary
A look at the Composite design pattern The Composite design pattern lets you treat primitive and composite objects exactly the same. This article explores how to implement the Composite pattern and how to use it with the Tiles tag library from the Apache Struts application framework. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
October 2000
Michael Koch
Leverage legacy systems with a blend of XML, XSL, and Java As e-commerce becomes a focal point for companies scrambling to have a presence on the electronic frontier, incorporating those new ventures into the existing infrastructure becomes crucial. A few creative applications using XML and Java can give you a good solution... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
June 2000
Michael Ball
XSL gives your XML some style Separating content from presentation is one of XML's major features. But eventually you need to style that XML into something presentable. That's where XSL (Extensible Stylesheet Language) comes in -- XSL transforms XML from one document type to another. Servlets provide a great platform for doing those translations. In this article you'll learn how to transform XML into HTML, using servlets. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
July 25, 2003
Dustin Marx
More JSP best practices Advancements in the JavaServer Pages specification have eased the development of highly maintainable and standardized JSP-based Web applications. This article discusses key advancements and how each of them enables easier development of robust JSP Web applications. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
December 2001
David Geary
Web application components made easy with Composite View If you want to develop flexible and reusable JSP-based Web applications, you must separate presentation logic from business logic. Beyond that, you can extend that flexibility and reusability by separating content from layout... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
November 2001
Dustin Marx
JSP best practices This article discusses simple approaches and best practices that, when used correctly, facilitate JavaServer Pages (JSPs) development. These tips ensure reusable and easily maintainable JSPs, JSPs that allow developers to focus on their programming strengths... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
September 2000
David Geary
JSP templates This article presents a template mechanism for JSP that allows layout to be encapsulated and reused. JSP templates minimize the impact of layout changes and encourage modular design... mark for My Articles similar articles
Linux Journal
April 1, 2007
Chad Files
Use Inkscape and XSLT to Create Cross-Platform Reports and Forms A way to create platform-independent dynamic forms and reports. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
October 2002
Jeff Friesen
Java's character and assorted string classes support text-processing Text-processing is one of the more frequent activities in which computer programs engage. Java supports that activity via the Character, String, StringBuffer, and StringTokenizer classes. This article explores each class and introduces you to an assortment of those classes' methods. mark for My Articles similar articles
Linux Journal
March 1, 2002
Cameron Laird
XSLT Powers a New Wave of Web Applications Extensible Stylesheet Language for Transformations (XSLT) is a computing language specialized for mapping XML documents into other XML documents... mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
September 2002
Joe Walker
XML glossary With XML evolving at a rapid pace, many developers get lost in a sea of acronyms. This article defines many XML technologies crucial to Java developers mark for My Articles similar articles
Linux Journal
July 2001
Reuven M. Lerner
Custom JSP Actions Learning shorthand for complicated Java code.... mark for My Articles similar articles
Linux Journal
February 1, 2007
Ben Martin
Virtual Filesystems Are Virtual Office Documents Use libferris, XML and XSLT to create virtual filesystems and virtual documents. mark for My Articles similar articles
JavaWorld
March 2001
Tony Loton
Access the world's biggest database with Web DataBase Connectivity What if the World Wide Web really were a database; if each Webpage were a table that you could query using SQL or even JDBC? Then you wouldn't be limited to just browsing. This article provides Java code for accessing web pages in an SQL-like manner. mark for My Articles similar articles