By: Emiley J. in JSP Tutorials on 2006年12月09日 [フレーム]
Java Server Pages (JSP) are an afterbirth of Java Servlets. When Java Servlets were introduced it opened many avenues to a Java programmer. Java became a full fledged application server programming language. Though Java Servlets were great, it posed one great problem.
What is the need for JSP?
If you are a programmer or a web designer you will agree with me that not every programmer is a good designer and not every good designer is a good programmer. This is the exact problem posed by Java Servlets. Which means Java Servlets required the Java programmer to know the designing skills because the Java Servlets did not separate the Programming logic from the presentation layer.
Therefore there was a need to separate the design aspects from the Core Java programmers. This was the reason why, JSP was introduced.
How does JSP solve this problem?
Java Server Pages or JSP solved just this issue. It separated the designing issues from the programming logic. Simply put, if a company were to design a JSP based website, it would first design the layout using a professional web designer. This design can then be passed onto the JSP programmer who can then insert Java code (JSP code) inside these HTML pages. Once inserted, this pure HTML pages becomes a JSP page. It is as simple as that.
To give more re-usability and to further separate the programming logic Java Beans can be used. The 'usebean' property of a JSP page can just use these Java beans which is nothing but a Java class and then use the bean's methods from inside the JSP page making the JSP page very powerful. The Java bean on the other hand handle issues like connecting to the database, or making another HTTP connection etc.
Having understood the basics of a JSP page, it is then necessary to understand how to get started with JSP.
This policy contains information about your privacy. By posting, you are declaring that you understand this policy:
This policy is subject to change at any time and without notice.
These terms and conditions contain rules about posting comments. By submitting a comment, you are declaring that you agree with these rules:
Failure to comply with these rules may result in being banned from submitting further comments.
These terms and conditions are subject to change at any time and without notice.
Most Viewed Articles (in JSP )
Show a calendar for user input in JSP
Encrypting Passwords in Tomcat using Servlets
JSP Tags for SQL to connect to a database
Steps to get a Free SSL certificate for your Tomcat
Uploading a file to a server using JSP
Server Side Programming using JSP
Latest Articles (in JSP)
Show a calendar for user input in JSP
Steps to get a Free SSL certificate for your Tomcat
Encrypting Passwords in Tomcat using Servlets
JSP Tags for SQL to connect to a database
Uploading a file to a server using JSP
Uploading an Image to a Database using JSP
A JSP page that gets properties from a bean
Scriptlets and Expressions in JSP
The taglib, tag, include, attribute and the variable Directive in JSP
Show a calendar for user input in JSP
Encrypting Passwords in Tomcat using Servlets
Steps to get a Free SSL certificate for your Tomcat
JSP Tags for SQL to connect to a database
Uploading an Image to a Database using JSP
Uploading a file to a server using JSP
© 2023 Java-samples.com
Tutorial Archive: Data Science React Native Android AJAX ASP.net C C++ C# Cocoa Cloud Computing EJB Errors Java Certification Interview iPhone Javascript JSF JSP Java Beans J2ME JDBC Linux Mac OS X MySQL Perl PHP Python Ruby SAP VB.net EJB Struts Trends WebServices XML Office 365 Hibernate
Latest Tutorials on: Data Science React Native Android AJAX ASP.net C Cocoa C++ C# EJB Errors Java Certification Interview iPhone Javascript JSF JSP Java Beans J2ME JDBC Linux Mac OS X MySQL Perl PHP Python Ruby SAP VB.net EJB Struts Cloud Computing WebServices XML Office 365 Hibernate