2. Using the Tutorial Examples
3. Getting Started with Web Applications
5. JavaServer Pages Technology
Including Directives in a JSP Document
Creating Static and Dynamic Content
Generating a Document Type Declaration
7. JavaServer Pages Standard Tag Library
10. JavaServer Faces Technology
11. Using JavaServer Faces Technology in JSP Pages
12. Developing with JavaServer Faces Technology
13. Creating Custom UI Components
14. Configuring JavaServer Faces Applications
15. Internationalizing and Localizing Web Applications
16. Building Web Services with JAX-WS
17. Binding between XML Schema and Java Classes
19. SOAP with Attachments API for Java
21. Getting Started with Enterprise Beans
23. A Message-Driven Bean Example
24. Introduction to the Java Persistence API
25. Persistence in the Web Tier
26. Persistence in the EJB Tier
27. The Java Persistence Query Language
28. Introduction to Security in the Java EE Platform
29. Securing Java EE Applications
31. The Java Message Service API
32. Java EE Examples Using the JMS API
36. The Coffee Break Application
37. The Duke's Bank Application
A JSP document must be identified as such to the web container so that the container interprets it as an XML document. There are three ways to do this:
In your application’s web.xml file, set the is-xml element of the jsp-property-group element to true.
Use a Java Servlet Specification version 2.4 web.xml file and give your JSP document the .jspx extension.
Include a jsp:root element in your JSP document. This method is backward-compatible with JSP 1.2.
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