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 Murach's Java Servlets and JSP, 2nd Edition
Ever since the late 1990s when Java servlets and JavaServer Pages (JSPs) came into widespread use, web site developers have been switching from CGI scripting languages to servlets and JSPs. As a result, there has been tremendous growth in the use of servlets and JSPs. Today, there's little doubt that scrvlet and JSP technology is here to... |  |  Core Web Programming, Second EditionOne-stop shopping for serious Web developers!
The authoritative guide to every technology that enterprise Web developers need to master, from HTML 4 to Java 2 Standard Edition 1.3, servlets to JavaServer Pages, and beyond. Core Web Programming,... |  |  Special Edition Using Java Server Pages and ServletsSpecial Edition Using JSP and Servlets starts by detailing the evolution of web servers that led to the creation of ASP and JSP. It explains both the limitations of previous technologies and the benefits that JSP provides including platform independence. Includes coverage of: organizing applications with multiple files and client-side objects,... |
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 J2EE Security for Servlets, EJBs, and Web ServicesJ2EE developers have an extraordinary array of powerful options for securing their Web services, Web applications, EJB components and RMI objects. Now, expert Java architect Pankaj Kumar helps developers make sense of Java's increasingly rich security APIs, tools, patterns, and best practices-showing how to use each of them in the right place,... |  |  Java Servlet ProgrammingA few years ago, the hype surrounding applets put Java on the map as a programming language for the Web. Today, Java servlets stand poised to take Java to the next level as a Web development language. The main reason is that servlets offer a fast, powerful, portable replacement for CGI scripts. The Java Servlet API, introduced as the... |  |  |
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 |  |  JavaServer Faces in ActionHelping front-end developers, back-end developers, and architects understand how they can get the most out of JavaServer Faces (JSF), this guide to the new official standard for simplifying Java web development explains what JSF is, how it works, and how it relates to other frameworks and technologies like Struts, Servlets, Portlets, JSP, and ... |  |  Java and XSLT (O'Reilly Java)Java and Extensible Stylesheet Language Transformations (XSLT) are very different technologies that complement one another, rather than compete. Java's strengths are portability, its vast collection of standard libraries, and widespread acceptance by most companies. One weakness of Java, however, is in its ability to process text.... |
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