| | In this episode, Kito, Danno, and Ian discuss microservices, MicroProfile, Java EE, Wildfly, ActiveMQ, KeyCloak, OpenShift, and Docker with special guest Steven Pousty, Head of Developer Advocacy for Red Hat. They also discuss Polymer with TypeScript, Angular 5, Getting Things Done, the Pomodoro Technique, Eclipse Che, and more. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Danno, and Ian discuss all things Java, Java EE, and JavaOne with special guest JavaOne Rockstar and Java Guardian Reza Rahaman. They also discuss Microprofile, Angular 5, and more. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Danno, and Ian discuss the Equifax hack (caused by an unpatched version of Struts), news from the Polymer Summit, Oracle’s donation of Java EE to Eclipse, Docker in-depth, and more. |
| | The new version of Apache MyFaces Tobago makes use of current technologies such as SCSS, CSS3, HTML5, AJAX to implement advanced layout managers in the browser. This was the goal for the next major release, Tobago 3. |
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The Enterprise Java Newscast, hosted by Kito D. Mann, Ian Hlavats, and Daniel Hinojosa, is a monthly podcast that covers the latest headlines, trends, and technologies in the world of enterprise software development.
In this episode, Kito and Danno discuss Google I/O, PWAs, Polymer, Java EE 8, JavaOne, testing, TypeScript, augmented reality, Kotlin, Java 9, and more.
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| |
The Enterprise Java Newscast, hosted by Kito D. Mann, Ian Hlavats, and Daniel Hinojosa, is a monthly podcast that covers the latest headlines, trends, and technologies in the world of enterprise software development. In this episode, Kito and Danno discuss JSF, Polymer, BootsFaces, Java EE 8, microprofile.io, and more.
|
| | In this series of articles, Riccardo Massera and Stephan Rauh introduce you to the BootsFaces and AngularFaces JSF frameworks. In the first article, they explained how these frameworks can be useful in your JSF Projects and highlighted their main features. This second article will get you started developing a simple project. The last article will cover more advanced features like the new AJAX engine of BootsFaces and the advanced search expressions.. |
| | In their first episode after a long hiatus, Kito, Ian, and Danno discuss a variety of topics, including Elm, Angular, JSweet, PrimeNG, Web Components, Polymer, TypeScript, and more. |
| | This episode, recorded in late March, 2016, features a lively discussion with Kito, Daniel, and special guest Java Champion Arun Gupta. They discuss a variety of topics, including Docker, Kubernetes, the future of Java EE, Couchbase, the impact of removing a popular NPM package, health and fitness, and more. |
| | Kito, Danno, and special guest Cagatay Civici discuss font-end web development, Angular2, Web Components, PrimeFaces and related projects (Prime Elements, PrimeUI, and PrimeNG), Java EE MVC, Oracle dropping the Java plugin, and Oracle’s commitment to Java EE and the JCP. |
| | In this series of articles, Riccardo Massera and Stephan Rauh introduce you to the BootsFaces and AngularFaces JSF frameworks. In the first article, they will explain how these frameworks can be useful in your JSF Projects and highlight their main features. The second article will get you started developing a simple project. The last article will cover more advanced features like the new AJAX engine of BootsFaces and the advanced search expressions. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Daniel, Ian and special guest Venkat Subramaniam discuss a wide variety of topics including JavaOne, Java lambdas, microservices, ES2015’s class syntax, and his new book, Pragmatic Scala (the second edition of Programming Scala). In fact, the discussion was so great that we skipped the new releases! They are, however, included here for your reference. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Daniel, and Ian discuss the challenges of programming with different languages plus new releases from JBoss, Spring, PrimeFaces, RichFaces, TypeScript, git, WebSphere, and more. They also discuss the rise of TypeScript as a popular alternative to other JavaScript transpiler languages, and the possibility that web assemblies will marginalize JavaScript altogether. |
| | In this episode, Kito and Daniel discuss new releases from PrimeFaces, OpenWebBeans, DeltaSpike, Spring Boot, Polymer, AngularJS, WebAssembly, Play, Lucene, new JSF extensions, and more. They also discuss Microsoft’s open-source strategy and Visual Studio Code. |
| | A major US insurance company used JSF to develop a customer facing web application that gives customers the ability to find the best rates for themselves, get quotes, and buy a policy online. Essentially the customers start by answering some basic questions, providing enough information about themselves to initiate the underwriting process. Based on their responses, the application displays additional customized pages and perhaps prompts them for more information. |
| | In this episode, Kito and Daniel are joined by special guest Seb Rose (co-author of The Cucumber for Java Book: Behaviour-Driven Development for Testers and Developers). They discuss new releases from Polymer, ICEfaces, PrimeFaces, JBoss EAP, SonarCube, Pitest, IntelliJ IDEA, Serenity, and more. They also discuss Behavior-driven-testing (BDD), Cucumber, Geb, Spock, and Test-Driven Development (TDD). |
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, and Daniel cover new releases from Oracle, PrimeFaces, RichFaces, Hibernate, Spring, Apache, and more. They also discuss Angular.js 2.0’s decision to use TypeScript, Microsoft dropping IE, and testing with Selenium and Geb. |
| | In this episode, Kito and Daniel cover new releases from HighFaces, GISFaces, Spring, Java SE/ME, WebSphere, Arquillian, Apache, and more. They also discuss Microsoft’s new Spartan browser and Pivotal’s decision to stop sponsoring Groovy and Grails. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, Daniel and special guest Reza Rahman (technical evangelist from Oracle) cover new Enterprise Java releases, including Jersey, RichFaces, AngularJS, TypeScript, JMS, Akka, Spring, Hibernate OGM, JSF, Scala and more. They also discuss Oracle’s new Alta UI project, as well as Adopt-a-JSR, JavaOne videos, and more. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, and Daniel cover new releases of AngularJS, PrimeFaces, MyFaces, Bootstrap, Hadoop, Spring Roo, Tomcat, Arquillian, Spring Framework, Spring Integration, Akka, Solr, Lucene, and more. They also discuss the forking of Node.js, microservices vs app servers, and a recent blog post about why you shouldn’t use JSF. |
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D. Mann talks with Manfred Riem about his favorite features in JSF 2.2, what it's like working on the Mojarra JSF implementation, upcoming features in JSF 2.3, and the new MVC 1.0 JSR. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, and Daniel discuss JavaOne, JSF, web frameworks, mobile development, Internet of Things, and new JBoss, Apache, PrimeFaces, Spring, MySQL, and TypeSafe releases. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, and Daniel change up the format to involve more discussion. They discuss the new Java EE JSRs (JSF, JMS, Servlet, CDI, Java API for JSON Binding, etc.) plus entirely new proposals such as MVC and Java API for JSON Binding. Other topics include RichFaces, PrimeFaces, Apache TomEE, Delta Spike, QUnit, Angular.js. Hibernate OGM, Spring Boot, JBoss Errai, and more, plus upcoming conferences. |
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D. Mann talks with Shay Shmeltzer about Oracle's ADF Mobile, ADF Faces Rich Client, and Oracle's extensive use of JSF in its products. Shay is director of product management for Oracle's mobile and development tools and frameworks. This interview was recorded in May of 2014. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, and Daniel discuss new releases from Spring, JBoss, ICEsoft, PrimeFaces, Apache, IBM, and TypeSafe. They also discuss build tools, the future of JSF, Daniel’s languagematrix project, and the Mojarra web site. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, and Daniel cover new releases from Spring, MyFaces, TypeSafe, JBoss, Oracle, and Apache. They also discuss the ThoughtWorks Technology Radar, the state of JavaServer Faces, Angular.js, Eclipse, and more.
|
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, and Daniel cover new releases from Spring, MyFaces, ICEsoft, JBoss, Oracle, and Apache. They also discuss responsive design, the Java EE 8 survey, and James Gosling’s Oracle Report Card. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, and Daniel cover new releases from Spring, PrimeFaces, ICEsoft, JBoss, IBM, Oracle, Apache, and TypeSafe. They also discuss Oracle’s decision to drop support for GlassFish, and RebelLabs’ Decision Maker’s Guide to Java Web Frameworks. |
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D. Mann talks with Ed Burns, JSF Spec Lead, about JSF 2.2 and Java EE 7. |
| | Arjan Tijms and Bauke Scholtz (BalusC) explain their motivation for creating the open source JSF utility library OmniFaces and discuss their latest project zeef.com. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, and Daniel cover new releases from SpringSource, PrimeFaces, ICEsoft, JBoss, IBM, Oracle, an TypeSafe. They also try out recording the newscast using Google Hangouts instead of Skype. |
| | In this series of articles, Leonardo Uribe discusses JSF 2 and MyFaces Core performance, and its implications for web applications. Leonardo compares different aspects—speed, memory usage, session size—to give a better understanding of how JSF works under different conditions. This third article will wrap it up with an up to date (2013) web framework comparison between JSF 2 and other alternatives like Apache Wicket, Apache Tapestry, Spring MVC and Grails 2. |
| | In this series, Leonardo Uribe, Apache MyFaces committer, compares the performance of Oracle Mojarra, MyFaces, and Apache Wicket. In the second article of
this series we'll use the sample application to analyze JSF 2.0 in different situations where memory consumption and session size become relevant. We'll examine how memory
behaves under different situations and how it can impact the performance of JSF. Then we'll examine how session size is affected by JSF and its implications in web applications. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, and Daniel cover new releases from Apache, PrimeFaces, SpringSource, ICEsoft, JBoss, IBM, Oracle, Google, and more. They also discuss the new Google Android IDE and SpringSource's new Reactor asynchronous framework. |
| | In this series, Leonardo Uribe, Apache MyFaces committer, compares the performance of Oracle Mojarra, MyFaces, and Apache Wicket. |
| | JavaServer Faces 2.2 (JSR 344) was officially approved on April 18th last week. The results were unanimous, with the exception of a couple of members whose voting rights were suspended (such as Google), and a couple that didn't vote (such as Nokia). JSF 2.2 is part of the Java EE 7 release train, which includes a bunch of other JSRs. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, and Daniel cover new releases from Oracle, IBM, SpringSource, PrimeFaces, ICEfaces, Apache, JBoss, NetBeans, eXo Platform, and more. They also discuss cloud IDEs and RESTful web framework benchmarks. |
| | With a new free version of Oracle ADF, it might be time for JSF developers to take a look at what Oracle has to offer to create richer UIs and add reusability to their applications. Shay Shmeltzer reviews the new Oracle ADF Essentials offering from the perspective of JSF developers. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, and Daniel cover new releases from SpringSource, PrimeFaces, ICEfaces, Apache, JBoss, Eclipse, and TypeSafe. They also discuss a report that claims using Spring lowers code quality, "stateless" JSF views, and Java security FUD. |
| | In this article, JSF 2.0 Expert Group member Roger Keays highlights the pitfalls of using the static FacesContext.getCurrentInstance() locator method, and describes one workaround using JSF's native dependency injection and another using EL 2.2 method parameters. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, and Daniel cover new releases from SpringSource, PrimeFaces, ICEfaces, Apache, JBoss, and Liferay. They also discuss the pros and cons of the new Spring Migration Analyzer, as well as Getting Things Done and Pomodoro Technique. |
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D. Mann talks with Ted Goddard about ICEfaces, ICEfaces Mobile, JSF 2.2, and more. |
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D. Mann talks with Neil Griffin about Liferay Faces project, portlets, and JSF. |
| | John Hellier demonstrated how a team became highly productive using JSF to implement a complex UX design with minimal need for custom Javascript. This article walks through release cycles that transitioned a team to JSF from straight Javascript. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, and Daniel discuss new releases from JBoss, SpringSource, MyFaces, PrimeFaces, ICEfaces, JSFToolbox, and Oracle, plus highlights from JavaOne and JSF performance improvements. |
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D. Mann talks with Cagatay Civici about PrimeFaces, including PrimeFaces Mobile and PrimeFaces Extensions. |
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D.
Mann talks with Lincoln Baxter about JBoss Forge, PrettyFaces,
PrettyTime, and more. |
| | In the second article of this series, Hazem Saleh
discusses how to use MyFaces Tomahawk with the JSF 2.0. This
article explains how to combine the power of MyFaces 2.0 core and
Tomahawk 1.1.11 in order to develop an interactive Mashup
application. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, and Daniel discuss
PrimeFaces, ICEfaces, Spring Tools Suite, JBoss Developer Studio,
Spring Data, Hibernate, Arquillian, Rod Johnson leaving
SpringSource, Java developer shortages, and more. |
| | In this episode, Kito, Ian, and Daniel discuss
JAXConf/JSF Summit 2012, Java 8, WebSphere Liberty Profile,
Arquillian, and new releases from MyFaces, Spring, JBoss, ICEfaces,
RichFaces, Tomcat, and more. |
| | In the fourth installment of this series on MyFaces
ExtVal, Gerhard Petracek explains some concepts provided by the
Core of ExtVal that allow you to integrate custom concepts easily.
|
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D.
Mann talks with Brian Leathem about RichFaces
and the Seam Faces
Module.
|
| | Stephen Maryka, Chief Technical Officer at ICEsoft
Technologies Inc., provides an overview of ICEmobile, which enables
Java Enterprise developers to build web applications that provide
the native look, feel, and capabilities of the mobile devices from
which they are accessed.
|
| | In this episode of the newscast, Kito, Ian, and Daniel
discuss JDK 8, LiferayFaces, the new Jenkins repository, and new
releases of ICEfaces, MyFaces, Weld, Ceylon, ModeShape, Arquillian,
Akka, NetBeans, and several Spring products.
|
| | Kito, Ian, and Daniel the PrimeFaces / ICEfaces
controversy, JSF 2.2, and new releases of MyFaces, Mojarra,
ICEfaces, PrettyFaces, DeltaSpike, JBoss EAP, Hibernate,
IronJacamer, Spring Roo, IBM WebSphere, Liferay, MyBatis for Scala,
and more. |
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D.
Mann discusses MyFaces Ajax, MyFaces Extensions Scripting, and
alternative JVM languages with Werner Punz. |
| | Brian Leathem discusses the latest developments in the
RichFaces project. New components, mobile compatibility, resource
loading optimizations, Ajax push, and CDI integration are all areas
that have seen improvement with the recent 4.1 and 4.2 releases. |
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D.
Mann discusses Spring Framework 3.0 and Spring's support for JSF
with Spring Framework co-founder Juergen Hoeller. |
| | In the third installment of the Trinidad series,
Matthias Wessendorf takes you on a tour of the Table and Tree
components.
|
| | Kito, Ian, and new co-host Daniel Hinojosa discuss the
new DeltaSpike CDI project, plus new releases of PrimeFaces,
MyFaces, ICEfaces, Spring, Hibernate, RichFaces, Mojarra, Seam,
Artifactory, JRebel, and more. |
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D.
Mann discusses Arquillian and Seam with Dan Allen and Andrew Lee
Rubinger. |
| | Kito, Ian, and special guest Daniel Hinojosa discuss
new releases of WebSphere, PrimeFaces, MyFaces, ICEfaces, Tomcat,
Spring, Hibernate, Seam, Infinispan, and more. |
| | Kito, Ian, and special guest Daniel Hinojosa discuss
headlines from JavaOne 2011. |
| | Most people think of JSF as a technology for building standard HTML applications. However, the JSF 2.0 composite model is quite flexible and can work with other technologies as well. In this article, Hamilton Matos will show how to create a JSF component that is based on JavaFX.
|
| | The second article in this series introduces the OpenFaces DataTable and TreeTable components. DataTable extends the standard JSF DataTable component with a multitude of additional features. TreeTable has many of the same features of DataTable but is targeted at displaying hierarchical data structures.
|
| | Kito and Ian discuss JSF Summit / JAX 2011 and new
releases of Java, WebSphere, JBoss, MyFaces, ICEfaces, Eclipse
Indigo, and PrimeFaces plus Oracle's Java Magazine, REST APIs, and
more.
|
| | In this episode of the JSF and Java EE Newscast, Kito
and Ian discuss new releases from MyFaces, ICEsoft, Hibernate,
JRebel, Gavin King's new programming language, plus industry news
from Red Hat, Microsoft, Google, Terracotta, and more. |
| | The JSF and Java EE Newscast, hosted by Kito D. Mann
and Ian Hlavats, covers the latest headlines in the world of
JavaServer Faces and Enterprise Java development. Topics in this
episode include new releases of
many projects (RichFaces, GlassFish,
PrimeFaces, many MyFaces projects,
Seam, etc.), CDISource, Red Hat,
James Gossling, NetBeans, JSF
Summit / JAX 2011, and more. |
| | This is the first episode of the JSF and Java EE
newscast, hosted by Kito D. Mann and Ian Hlavats. This monthly
newscast covers the latest headlines in the world of JavaServer
Faces and Enterprise Java development. Topics include
Jenkins/Hudson, JSF 2, JSF Summit / JAX 2011, JSFToolbox for
Dreamweaver, and more. |
| | Traditionally, researchers have bound data and stored it in a physical form on a library shelf; the only way to access it was to look up its ISBN. In more recent times, research data has often been stored on someone’s computer somewhere, accessible to only a few. There has been a growing need for long term archiving of data, to make it available in a digital form that can be shared and used by others.
|
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D. Mann discusses ICEfaces 2 and HTML 5 with Ted Goddard. Ted is the Chief Software Architect at ICEsoft Technologies and is the technical lead for the JavaServer Faces Ajax framework, ICEfaces, and the Ajax Push framework, ICEpush. He currently participates in the Servlet and JavaServer Faces expert groups.
|
| | OpenFaces is an open source JSF library that provides extended versions of the standard components, a number of unique components, including mature DataTable, TreeTable, and scheduling components, and a client-side validation framework. The first article in this three part series gives a general overview of the library, and helps the reader to start using it. |
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D. Mann talks with Daniel Lichtenberger about [fleXive] and its use of JSF. [fleXive] CMS is a Content Management System based on the [fleXive] content repository, Java Enterprise Edition 5 and JavaServer Faces (JSF) 1.2. |
| | Max Katz, Senior Systems Engineer at Exadel, shows you
how to control traffic to the server using the RichFaces queue.
|
| | In the second installment of the Trinidad series,
Matthias
Wessendorf shows how Ajax is built into all the Trinidad
components.
You will also learn how easy it is to use the client-
and server-side
Ajax API, which gives you a straightforward way to
add application
specific Ajax support. |
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D.
Mann talks with Martin Marinschek about MyFaces, IRIAN, and related
topics. This interview was recorded in December of 2009 at the JSF
Summit conference in Orlando, Florida. |
| | In this second article, Jeremy Grelle continues his
exploration of Spring Faces with a sample application that
demonstrates the Spring-centric integration approach. |
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D.
Mann talks with Daniel Hinojosa about testing JBoss Seam
Applications from the bottom up, and Seam pitfalls. This interview
was recorded in September of 2008 at the JSF Summit, formerly
called JSFOne, in Vienna, Virginia.
|
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D.
Mann talks with Jeremy Grelle about Spring Web Flow and Spring
Faces.
|
| | In the first part of this series, Hazem Saleh
introduces MyFaces Tomahawk, a set of components that go well
beyond the JSF specification, including converters, validators, and
a set of attributes added to the standard JSF components. He also
discusses some of its unique features, as well as the new CAPTCHA
component. |
| | In the third installment of this series on MyFaces
ExtVal, Gerhard Petracek explains how to validate custom
annotations, annotation based client-side validation, and zero
configuration in MyFaces ExtVal.
|
| | In the first article of this three part series, Lewis
Gass introduces Gracelets, a relatively new technology that
combines JSF and Facelets with the power of Groovy. Gracelets
harnesses powerful features in Groovy and provides a Domain
Specific Language (DSL) for JSF, complementing Facelets and
providing many new features and an extensible framework.
|
| |
In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D. Mann talks with Scott O’Bryan about the JSR301 JSF Portlet Bridge. This interview was recorded in September of 2008 at JSFOne.
|
| |
In case you haven't heard, JSFCentral and No Fluff Just Stuff have teamed up once again to launch the second annual JSF Summit this December 1st-4th in Sunny Orlando, FL. There's less than two weeks left before the $400 Early Bird discount ends.
|
| | In the second article of this series on using
storyboard design for Web applications, Steven Murray explains how
to map the Storyboard design to a JSF implementation, giving
special attention to Storyboard Controllers.
|
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D.
Mann talks with Stan Silvert about JSFUnit, an open source
integration testing and debugging framework for JSF applications
and JSF AJAX components. This interview was recorded in September
of 2008 at JSFOne. |
| | In the second article of this series, Gerhard
Petracek
explains how to replace standard JSF validators with
MyFaces ExtVal
annotations, and discusses other MyFaces ExtVal
annotations that
allow you to validate values across input
components. |
| | In this podcast, JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D. Mann talks with Ryan Lubke about Mojarra, Sun's implementation of the JavaServer Faces specification. Ryan is the implementation lead for Project Mojarra. This interview was recorded at JavaOne 2009 in San Francisco, CA. |
| | In this podcast JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D.
Mann
interviews Ed Burns about JSF 2. This was recorded in April,
2009 at
JSFDays in Vienna, Austria. |
| |
Every once in a while, I run one some Indeed job trend searches and post them on a blog somewhere. My last entry was about a year ago. Of course I'm not the only person doing this, but usually that's not a good reason to avoid doing something. Everybody does things differently, even queries.
So, this year, I did the obligatory JSF vs Struts comparison.
|
| |
There's one thing that's been bugging me for a while: no built-in support for conversation scope. (For those who don't know, "conversation" scope is shorter than a servlet session and longer than a request, and is popular in frameworks like Seam, Spring Web Flow, MyFaces Orchestra, etc.).
|
| | In this podcast JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D.
Mann
interviews Neil Griffin about Liferay, Ajax, and ICEfaces.
This was
recorded in September of 2008 at JSFOne.
|
| |
In case you hadn't heard, Apache Shale is moving to the Apache Attic. What is the Apache Attic? It's a new project, started last year. It's where other projects go to die.
|
| |
So, the big news today is that Oracle is buying Sun. This is definitely the biggest thing to happen to Java since it's original release (not to mention the rest of Sun's portfolio). Overall, I believe Java is in pretty good hands. Oracle has bet their entire non-database business on Java.
|
| | In the first article of this series, Gerhard Petracek
introduces MyFaces ExtVal, a JSF-centric validation platform that
provides advanced features not yet available in other JSF
validation frameworks. |
| | In the second installment of this two-part article,
Dan
Allen continues his discussion of some common performance
problems
you may encounter when using JSF components, Seam
components, and
the EL. You'll learn about the set of best
practices for eliminating
them that led to an improvement of two
orders of magnitude in the
performance of his application. |
| | In this podcast JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D.
Mann
interviews Jason Lee about Mojarra (the JSF reference
implementation), the Scales component library, and all things JSF.
This was recorded in September of 2008 at JSFOne. |
| | In this podcast JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D.
Mann
interviews Ian Hlavats about designing for JSF, working with
teams
of developers and designers, and the JSFToolbox Suite, a set
of
Dreamweaver plug-ins for JSF. |
| | In the first of this two-part article, Dan Allen
discusses some common performance problems you may encounter when
using JSF components, Seam components, and the EL. You'll learn
about the set of best practices for eliminating them that led to an
improvement of two orders of magnitude in the performance of his
application.
|
| | This is the first in a series of articles by
Matthias
Wessendorf about the Apache MyFaces Trinidad JSF component
suite. |
| | In this podcast JSFCentral editor-in-chief Kito D.
Mann
interviews Peter Muir about Seam 2.1, WebBeans and JSF 2.
Peter is a
core developer at JBoss and the project lead for Seam.
This was
recorded in October of 2008. |
| | Sometimes the best way to explain JSF to the
business is
through the design technique called Storyboarding.
Steven Murray's
new
series of articles explains how you can use
Storyboarding to
discuss JSF
in terms of screens, compartments, and
components as
well
as state
transitions and navigation paths. In this
first
article,
Steven
provides an overview of this techique, and
explains
key
elements
such as use cases, the User Interface model,
Screens,
Operations,
and Compartments.
|
| | Spring Web Flow 2 introduced the Spring Faces
module,
which provides first-class integration support between
JavaServer
Faces (JSF) and Spring. This is the first article in
David Grelle's
series about Spring Faces. It explains both the
JSF-centric and
Spring-centric approaches to integrating the two
frameworks. |
|
|
|