Fast Track to JavaServer Faces 2 (JSF 2) : Using JSF 2 to Build JEE Web Apps Training in Chino Hills
We offer private customized training for groups of 3 or more attendees.
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Course Description |
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This course will get you up to speed with JSF 2 in a very short time. It
includes all the important concepts, as well as numerous hands on labs
that will have you building working JSF applications very quickly. It
covers all the important architectural concepts, as well as providing
practical instruction on how to use the many capabilities of the JSF
framework. It includes coverage of all important capabilities that are
new in JSF 2, including the use of Facelets, and using the new JSF 2
annotations. The course includes a broad coverage of the most important
JSF capabilities, including the JSF architecture, working with managed
beans, the JSF Expression Language, creating JSF pages with facelets
and/or JSP, the JSF core and HTML tag libraries, data tables,
validation, and conversion. After learning this m aterial, you'll be
ready to use JSF to create your own solutions in the most demanding situations.
Course Length: 3 Days
Course Tuition: $1290 (US) |
Prerequisites |
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Java, HTML, and XML programming experience is recommended. |
Course Outline |
Overview of Java EE and Java Web Applications
Java EE and Web App Overview
Servlet, Servlet Scopes
JSPs, JSP Lifecycle
Custom Tags, Tag Libraries, taglib directive
Model View Controller
Getting started with JSF
JSF Overview
Purpose and Goals
JSF Architecture
JSF Views, Managed Beans, Controller, configuration
Downloading and Installing JSF
Your first JSF Application - setup, configuration, deployment
Server setup and use
Managed Beans
Defining a Managed Bean
Managed Bean Lifecycle
<managed-bean> elements in faces-config.xml
Managed Beans and JSF Forms
Managed Beans as Value Binding Expressions
JSF Expression Language (EL) & the Unified EL (JSF 1.2)
Value Binding Expressions
Method Binding Expressions
Implicit Objects
JSF Navigation
<navigation-rule> configuration issues
<navigation-case> and nested elements
How to use the navigation rules
Session 5: The JSF Tag Libraries
JSF Tag Library Overview
JSF Core tags <f:tagName>
JSF HTML tags <h:tagName>
Using the Most Common Form controls – TextFields, Buttons, Links …
h:dataTable
<h:dataTable> tag and nested tags <h:column> etc.
Working with collections of type List or array
Table headers and footers, f:facet
More about JSF Tags
Using <h:commandLink> and <h:outputLink>
Using the h:selectXxx Tags (e.g h:selectManyListbox)
JSF Event Model (Action, Value Change, and Data Model Listeners)
Standard Validators
required, validateDoubleRange, validateLongRange
Creating, configuring, and using Custom Validators
JSF Conversion
Standard JSF Converters
convertDateTime, convertNumber - configuration and usage
Custom Converters
JSF Lifecycle
Lifecycle Overview
Initial requests and postbacks
Restore View, Apply Request Values, Process Events, Process Validations, Update Model Values, Invoke Application, Render Response
renderResponse() and renderComplete()
Phase listeners
Additional Topics
Backing Beans / UIComponents
JSF and CSS
JSF and JavaScript
Localization and Resource Bundles
Ajax4jsf - Using Ajax with JSF
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Java Programming Uses & Stats
Difficulty
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Popularity
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Year Created 1995 |
Pros
Most Commonly Used:
Great Career Choice:
Android Apps Development:
It Can Run On Any Platform:
Great Supporting IDE's: |
Cons
Uses a Lot of Memory:
Difficulty in Learning:
Slow Start Up Times:
Verbose and Complex Code:
Commercial License Cost: |
Java Programming Job Market |
Average Salary
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Job Count
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Top Job Locations
New York City |
Complimentary Skills to have along with Java Programming
- If you are an experienced Java developer, learning a complimentary language to Java should come much more naturally. As an example JetBrains recently created the Kotlin programming language which is officially supported by Google for mobile development. Kotlin compiles to Java bytecode and runs on the JVM; it's purported to address many of Java's shortcomings... |