
Authoritative.
Strategic.

The Apache Software Foundation's Jakarta Struts remains the most popular Java framework for building enterprise-level Web applications. In the first book to cover the extensive new features of the final release of Struts 1.1, the authors present the technical and conceptual information you need to design, build, and deploy sophisticated Struts 1.1 applications.
What does this book cover?
This book covers everything you need to know about Struts and its supporting technologies, including JSPs, servlets, Web applications, the Jakarta-Tomcat JSP/servlet container, and much more. Here are just a few of the things you'll find in this book:
Who is this book for?
This book is for Java developers who want to build sophisticated, enterprise-level Web applications using the final production release of Struts 1.1.
Rick Hightower (www.rickhightower.com) is a developer who enjoys working with Java, J2EE, Ant, Struts, Web Services and XDoclet. Rick is also the CTO of Trivera Technologies (www.triveratch.com), a global training, mentoring, and consulting company focusing on enterprise development. Rick is a regular contributor to IBM developerWorks and has written more than 10 IBM developerWorks tutorials on subjects ranging from EJB to Web Services to XDoclet to Struts to Custom Tags.
While working at eBlox, Rick and the eBlox team used Struts and J2EE to build two frameworks and an ASP (application service provider) for online ecommerce stores. They started using Struts long before the 1.0 release.
Rick recently helped put together a well-received course for Trivera on Struts that runs on Tomcat 4.x, Resin EE 2.x, IBM WebSphere 5.0 (WSAD), JBoss 3.x, and WebLogic 8.1. When not traveling around the country teaching the Trivera Struts course (our bestseller), speaking at conferences about Struts, or doing Struts consulting and mentoring, Rick enjoys drinking coffee at an all night coffee shop and writing code, writing about Struts and other Java, J2EE and XP topics, and writing about himself in the third person.
Introduction.
Chapter 1: Introducing the Jakarta Struts Project and Its Supporting Components.
Chapter 2: An Overview of the Java Servlet and JavaServer Pages Architectures.
Chapter 3: Getting Started with Struts.
Chapter 4: Actions and ActionServlet.
Chapter 5: Advanced Action Classes.
Chapter 6: Building the Presentation Layer.
Chapter 7: Debugging Struts Applications.
Chapter 8: Working with Custom ActionMappings.
Chapter 9: Internationalizing Your Struts Applications.
Chapter 10: Managing Errors.
Chapter 11: Integrating the Jakarta Commons Database Connection Pool (DBCP).
Chapter 12: Working with the Validator.
Chapter 13: Using Tiles.
Chapter 14: Developing a Complete Struts Application.
Chapter 15: The struts-config.xml File.
Chapter 16: The HTML Tag Library.
Chapter 17: The Tiles Tag Library.
Chapter 18: The Logic Tag Library.
Chapter 19: The Template Tag Library.
Chapter 20: The Bean Tag Library.
Chapter 21: Struts Cookbook.
Index.
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