Fast Track to Jakarta Struts Training in Murfreesboro
We offer private customized training for groups of 3 or more attendees.
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Course Description |
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Struts is an open source, Model-View-Controller (MVC) framework
developed by The Apache Software Foundation as part of its Jakarta
project. Struts is built on top of JSP, Servlets, and custom tag
libraries. After reading the first J2EE Blueprints from Sun with their
explanation of MVC and how to accomplish it with custom tags, Servlets,
and JSP, one can clearly see that Struts is a manifestation of Sun's
J2EE MVC vision. Struts addresses many major issues in using vanilla
Servlets/JSP to build web systems. It solves the problem of controller
complexity by removing the workflow logic from the Servlets, and
directing workflow in an XML configuration file. Struts improves on the
limited form support in JSP by adding numerous capabilities to form
processing including easy validation, easy error display, and the
refilling of form input on form retries from a users previous entries.
It minimizes the complexity of JSP pages, by integrating with the JSTL
tag library, and additionally supplying a very extensive and flexible
set of custom tag libraries for many of the standard operations needed
in JSP pages. This course will get you up to speed with Struts in a
very short time. It includes all the important concepts, and hands on
labs that will have you building working Struts applications in no time
flat. In addition, this course covers how to extend the Struts framework
to fit your unique needs
Course Length: 3 Days
Course Tuition: $1290 (US) |
Prerequisites |
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Basic knowledge of HTML and JavaScript and practical Java and Servlet/JSP programming experience. |
Course Outline |
Getting started with Struts
Jakarta Struts Project
MVC and Struts
Review Servlets, JSP and Web Applications
Struts Architecture
Your first Struts Application
Configuring Struts applications
Defining views – the input JSP
Defining ActionForms (FormBeans)
Defining Actions
Mapping the Model to the View
Review of Custom Tags
Introduction to JSTL (JSP Standard Template Library)
Using the Struts HTML Tags, Struts Bean Tags and Struts Logic Tags
Pre-populating forms from FormBeans
Errors and Debugging Struts Applications
Error Handling
Action Error and ActionErrors
ActionForm validate() method
Error Management in Action.execute()
Error display in JSP pages: <html:errors> tag
Writing all errors to JSP page
Writing selected errors to JSP page
Handling exceptions
Declarative Exception Handling
Logging – A critical tool
Overview of logging
Simple Servlet Logging
Jakarta Commons Logging
Using Commons Logging
Log Message Levels
Apache log4j
Overview, Loggers, Appenders, Layouts, Using log4j
Dynamic Forms and the Validator Framework
Dynamic Forms
Issues with Regular Forms
Overview of Dynamic Forms
Configuring Dynamic Forms - The DynaActionForm and Form Properties
Using the Dynamic Form in the Action
The Validator Framework - Overview
Validation Rules
Adding Errors to the Resource Bundle
Using Validators with Dynamic and Static Forms
Important Predefined Validators : Email, mask, range, length, date and credit card validation
Using the Mask Rule
Working with the Tiles Custom Library
Issues with Managing JSP Complexity
View Reuse
The Tiles Framework
Defining Layouts for View Reuse
Using tiles:get, tiles:put, tiles:getAsString and tiles:insert
Tiles Definitions
JSP Definitions – Uses, Shortcomings
Using Definitions
XML Definitions
The Tiles Plugin
Tiles Controllers
Additional Capabilities
Forward and Include Actions
Setup Actions
DispatchAction
Managing Complexity
Multiple struts config files
Multiple resource bundles
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Java Programming Uses & Stats
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Year Created 1995 |
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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... |