I need help about converting a portion of jsp page to jsf. My old jsp page is big, and I am trying to change a portion of it (CountryDropdown List) to JSF. So I created a countryDropdown.jsf, I tested to run it directly, it loaded the country-list/works fine.
In my old jsp page (company.jsp), I removed the countryList's portion and try to call/include the new jsf "countryDropdown.jsf" something like this:
<jsp:include page="/web/Test/countryDropDown.jsf" flush="true" />
But I get the errors: java.lang.RuntimeException: Cannot find FacesContext
I am not sure what I was missing, if I directly run the new jsf page http://.../web/Test/countryDropDown.jsf it works fine.
It's not possible to include a JSF page in a regular JSP called directly. If you want to use JSF components, your request must be dispatched by the FacesServlet.
It might be possible to get your setup to work if company.jsp is itself called as a JSF page. But you'll probably keep running into problems; JSF is not really meant to be introduced in bots and pieces into an existing application. At the very least, each page should be either completely JSF or completely classic JSP.
Related
I have two jsp files (header.jspf and footer.jspf) that I want to include in a page produced by the doGet method of a servlet (Menu.java). I'm doing this by use of the RequestDispatcher.include() method. The header.jspf file only contains html so it renders fine. The footer.jspf file, however, contains both EL and JSP tags, neither of which render on the servlet page produced by Menu.java.
Looking at the source code of the page produced by Menu.java I understand that the reason for this problem is that the EL and JSP is not evaluated prior to being included in the servlet so it is just presumed by the browser that it is html.
While I'm guessing that what I'm trying to do may be poor (and deprecated) practice, I'd just like to find out if there is a way to get an included jsp file to render in a servlet just as it would in a jsp page when it contains EL and jsp tags?
I'm thinking that this question is general enough not to require my code to be posted, however if I'm wrong please tell me so and I will update with my code.
Not sure if there is a way to have RequestDispatcher.include() files processed, but including the footer explicitly will very likely work:
<%#include file="footer.jspf" %>
I am attempting to learn Java EE. After struggling through trying to understand the Java stack, it appears that that a basic dynamic web application can be accomplished by focusing on JSP and Servlets so I want to start there.
In Net Beans I have a basic project set up with a tomcat server and when I hit run I can get the web page to generate and display the default index.jsp page. I have added a css file to the project and this jsp page looks like any standard html page now. I then create a new servlet. I was also able to create a link in the index.jsp page so when I click on it, it calls the servlet.
What I don't understand is why when I create the servlet in Net Beans, the processRequest method comes pre-populated with several html print statements. I could easily make this page look like the jsp page I started with, making me wonder why I even need a JSP page. It appears the entire application could be comprised of servlets.
Could someone please explain the proper interaction between the two? It appears the index page can contain links that call various servlets, perhaps to access a database of comments, then do I create the response table in the servlet, or would I pass that information to another JSP page?
Understanding these basic workflows would really help. Thanks
JSP also a kind of a servlet . Right after you run the jsp , go to your netbeans project directory and right click the jsp and select view Servlet then you get the servlet representation of your jsp file. Actually jsp file is there to perform front end design easily. Without jsp It is really difficult task to perform front-end developing stuff inside servlet.
And you should keep in mind there is no such a thing called proccessRequest in javaEE . It is automatically generated by Netbeans once you create a new servlet. So just stick to basics. Erase all the auto-generated stuff from the class which has extended HttpServlet. And then you can override the required HTTP method/methods. (doGet , doPost etc..) You should take a look at this for more infromation ...
And this page will also improve your knowledge on javaEE
Q1: Does Spring or any opensource java UI framework support partial views like that in asp.net mvc?
For example in my main index.html (or _layout.cshtm per asp.net mvc3 spec)
I would have the folllowing code:
<span id="logindisplay">#Html.Partial("_LogOnPartial")</span>
where #Html is a helper to display a partial view for _LogonPartial.cshtml which just injected it's html view contents into the page?
Q2: If this is supposed If I want to display a bunch of partial views it would be helpful to display them concurrently in parallel to improve performance. Very similar to what linkedin is doing using dust and fizzy? http://engineering.linkedin.com/profile/engineering-new-linkedin-profile
Q3: Is fizzy available as open source like that of dust?
If you want to include content of a page into another page, by adding some code on the page itself, you should compare asp with jsp, not ASP.NET MVC* with JEE - Spring MVC
So, an equivalent to <span id="logindisplay">#Html.Partial("_LogOnPartial")</span> on a jsp would be one / all of the following
On your jsp, include content from another jsp using <%# include file="../includes/inner-content.jsp" %>. This is what is called a static include. The source of the included jsp is included and made part of the parent jsp, before the jsp is compiled. If you use an IDE, it will check to ensure the included jsp does infact exist at the path specified, relative to the location of the jsp in which you are adding the include. Technically this is a JSP Directive. The jsp being included could just be a fragment, and not addressable from the outside world (could be hidden inside WEB-INF)
You can also use what's called a Dynamic include <jsp:include page="someJSP.jsp" />. In this case, the included JSP should be addressable from the browser and should be capable of being rendered independently. When the server is executing the servlet to render the parent JSP, it stops when this tag is seen, and starts executing the servlet for the included jsp, the output obtained from the inner jsp execution is then merged to the output of the parent jsp, and processing of the parent jsp is resumed.
A third option would be to use Core JSTL taglib's <c:import url=""/>. This works just like option 2 above, except it also allows you to import a page / content from a url that lives outside your application. Basically you can mention a path to a jsp, or relative URI to a servlet mapping in your application, or a URL to an external page.
Now, I suspect this is not really what you want to do, if you are comparing with what Linkedin is doing. You want to mashup content from sources in your own application, and compose your page. You also want to do this in an asynch manner so as to keep load times in check. In this case, you HAVE to use JavaScript and Ajax. All the mechanisms described above are for server rendered pages (All HTML is created before the page is rendered in the browser). Just like #HTML. You need to create a simple framework / use an existing one, where once a page loads, it fires asynch ajax calls to the server to get content for specific areas on the page and renders the returned HTML in those specific areas.
Hope this helps.
Do let me know if I've misunderstood your question.
I'am new to Java Spring MVC. Official documentation is very poor and i've got a lot of questions about rendering pages in Spring.
I have page and top block with menu. This menu must be dynamic and must be displayed on all pages. In PHP frameworks this is very common and very easy task. But Spring makes my brain explode.. How can i separate rendering of this menu in some peace of logic and tell spring to render it all the time? For example in JSP. Shoud I use beans or other stuff?
Thanks for your answers!
Official documentation is very poor
No it isn't. Its the one place I always refer back to.
I use a jsp include and yes pass a java bean to the jsp from the controller. The included jsp will be cached the first time it is included. In other places I connect to a controller using jquery and ajax, which dynamically updates the page.
I'd suggest the official tutorials, and krams as good starting points.
You won't find much information about this in the Spring documentation because it's out of the scope of Spring.
You can use JSP includes just as you would do PHP includes. This will however force you to repeat the page layout and the include in each and every page of the application :
<jsp:include page="/menu.jspf" />
Or use a templating engine, like Sitemesh or Apache Tiles (see http://static.springsource.org/spring/docs/3.1.0.RC1/spring-framework-reference/html/view.html#view-tiles for Tiles integration in Spring).
The easiest way would be to use <jsp:include page="/menu.jsp" /> where "/menu.jsp" is a path to your menu jsp.
There are other solutions like using tiles, but <jsp:include> should do.
I'm trying to rewrite some Spring 1.2 code to Spring 3.0 one. Currently I'm stuck with JSP resolved by URL problem. Application uses separate JSP files with different layouts for serving the same model from the same controller. The JSP is switched using interceptor, that intercepts the url and changes the view.
For example:
/design_one/mypage.htm -> MyPageController -> /design_one/mypage.jsp
/design_two/mypage.htm -> MyPageController -> /design_two/mypage.jsp
Is there a way to make same or similar functionality using something better than raw interceptors?
Well, I've found a way to do it, but not sure if it's the optimal way.
What I did, I defined a name for each theme in their resource bundle, like "name=design_one". And then using it in JSP to include some other JSP's inside.
Something like this:
<spring:theme code="theme.name" var="themeName"/>
<jsp:include page="${themeName}/head.jsp"/>
<jsp:include page="${themeName}/foot.jsp"/>