By: aathishankaran in JSP Tutorials on 2007年02月13日 [フレーム]
The important syntax elements of JSP are tags. The JSP tags do not use <%, but just the < character.
A JSP tag is somewhat like an HTML tag. JSP tags can have a "start tag", a "tag body" and an "end tag". The start and end tag both use the tag name, enclosed in < and > characters. The end starts with a / character after the < character. The tag names have an embedded colon character : in them, the part before the colon describes the type of the tag.
For instance:
<some:tag>
body
</some:tag>
If the tag does not require a body, the start and end can be conveniently merged together, as
<some:tag/>
Here by closing the start tag with a /> instead of > character, we are ending the tag immediately, and without a body. (This syntax convention is the the same as XML.)
Tags can be of two types: loaded from an external tag library, or predefined tags. Predefined tags start with jsp: characters. For instance, jsp:include is a predefined tag that is used to include other pages.
jsp:include instead of loading the text of the included file in the original file, it actually calls the included target at run-time (the way a browser would call the included target. In practice, this is actually a simulated request rather than a full round-trip between the browser and the server).
Following is an example of jsp:include usage
<HTML>
<BODY>
Going to include hello.jsp...<BR>
<jsp:include page="hello.jsp"/>
</BODY>
</HTML>
Try it and see what you get. Now change the "jsp:include" to "jsp:forward" and see what is the difference. These two predefined tags are frequently very useful.
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