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(Server-Side Programming using Java Server Pages)
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MotivationSoftware components (e.g. objects, data
structures, primitives) are extensively used in Web applications
For example:Service local variablesAttributes forwarded in requestsSession attributes, such as user informationApplication attributes, such as access counters
See tutorial at http://java.sun.com/docs/books/tutorial/javabeans/
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MotivationStandard actions are used to manipulate
components: declaration, reading from the suitable context, setting of new values (according to input parameters), storing inside the suitable context, etc.
Java Beans provide a specification for automatic handling and manipulation of software components in JSP (and other technologies...)
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Java Beans: The IdeaJava Beans are simply objects of classes that
follow some (natural) coding convention:An empty constructorA readable property has a matching getterA writable property has a matching setter
Use JSP actions to access and manipulate the bean, and special action attributes to specify the properties of the bean, e.g., its scope
JSP programmers do not wish to write cumbersome code or class files
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Example 1: Access Counter
In the following example, we use a Bean to maintain an
access counter for requests to the pages
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package myUtils;
public class CounterBean {
private int counter;
public CounterBean() { counter = 0; }
public int getCounter() { return counter; }
public void setCounter(int i) { counter = i; }
public void increment() { ++counter; }
}
Counter Bean
CounterBean.java
Bean must reside in a package
A Bean is created by an empty constructor
Counter setter and getter
Other methods can be implemented as well
A Bean is a concept and therefore there’s no need to extend any class or implement any interface!
(though it would’ve been very Java-ish to create an empty interface “Bean”)
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<html>
<head><title>Bean Example</title></head><body>
<jsp:useBean id="accessCounter"
class=“myUtils.CounterBean" scope="application"/>
<% accessCounter.increment(); %>
<h1> Welcome to Page A</h1>
<h2>Accesses to this application:
<jsp:getProperty name="accessCounter" property="counter"/>
</h2>
<a href="pageB.jsp">Page B</a></body>
</html> pageA.jsp
Invokes getCounter()
An instance named according to the given id is either found in the relevant scope or is created
The default scope is page
You could also use the type attribute in order to instantiate a data type which is either superclass of class or an interface that class implements
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<html>
<head><title>Bean Example</title></head><body>
<jsp:useBean id="accessCounter"
class=“myUtils.CounterBean" scope="application"/>
<% accessCounter.increment(); %>
<h1> Welcome to Page B</h1>
<h2>Accesses to this application:
<jsp:getProperty name="accessCounter" property="counter"/>
</h2>
<a href="pageA.jsp">Page A</a></body>
</html>
pageB.jsp
A very similar JSP
Since an instance named according to the given id can be found in the application scope, no instantiation takes place
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myUtils.CounterBean accessCounter = null;
synchronized (application) {
accessCounter = (myUtils.CounterBean) _jspx_page_context.getAttribute("accessCounter",
PageContext.APPLICATION_SCOPE);
if (accessCounter == null) {
accessCounter = new myUtils.CounterBean();
_jspx_page_context.setAttribute("accessCounter",
accessCounter, PageContext.APPLICATION_SCOPE);
}
}
Part of the Generated Servlet
Similar effect to getServletContext().setAttribute()
Similar effect to getServletContext().getAttribute()
The instance is created and kept in the application’s scope as required. Note however that accessing this instance is out of the synchronized scope
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Example 2: Session DataIn the following example, we use a Bean in
order to keep a user's details throughout the session
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package myUtils;
public class UserInfoBean {
private String firstName;
private String lastName;
public UserInfoBean() { firstName = lastName = null;}
public String getFirstName() {return firstName;}
public String getLastName() {return lastName;}
public void setFirstName(String string) {firstName = string;}
public void setLastName(String string) {lastName = string;}
} UserInfoBean.java
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<html>
<head><title>Information Form</title></head>
<body>
<h1>Fill in your details:</h1>
<form action="infoA.jsp" method="get"><p>
Your First Name:
<input type="text" name="firstName" /> <br/>
Your Last Name:
<input type="text" name="lastName" /><br/>
<input type="submit" /></p>
</form>
</body></html> infoForm.htmlcs236607
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<jsp:useBean id="userInfo" class=“myUtils.UserInfoBean"
scope="session"/>
<jsp:setProperty name="userInfo" property="*"/>
<html>
<head><title>Page A</title></head><body>
<h1>Hello
<jsp:getProperty name="userInfo" property="firstName"/>
<jsp:getProperty name="userInfo" property="lastName"/>,
</h1>
<h1>Have a nice session!</h1>
<h2> <a href="infoB.jsp">User Info B</a></h2>
</body></html> infoA.jsp
Match all the request parameters to corresponding properties. You could match parameters to properties explicitly using property=… param=…
You can also set properties with explicit values using property=… value=…
The String values are converted to the right bean’s property types..
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<jsp:useBean id="userInfo" class=“myUtils.UserInfoBean"
scope="session"/>
<jsp:setProperty name="userInfo" property="*"/>
<html>
<head><title>Page B</title></head><body>
<h1>Hello
<jsp:getProperty name="userInfo" property="firstName"/>
<jsp:getProperty name="userInfo" property="lastName"/>,
</h1>
<h1>Have a nice session!</h1>
<h2> <a href="infoA.jsp">User Info A</a></h2>
</body></html>infoB.jsp
A very similar JSP
This time the request has no parameters so no bean properties are set
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Advantages of Java BeansEasy and standard management of data
Automatic management of bean sharing and lots more
Good programming styleAllow standard but not direct access to members
You can add code to the setters and getters (e.g. constraint checks) without changing the client code
You can change the internal representation of the data without changing the client code
Increase of separation between business logic (written by programmers) and HTML (written by GUI artists)
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Custom JSP TagsJSP code may use custom tags – tags that are
defined and implemented by the programmerThe programmer defines how each of the
custom tags is translated into Java codeThere are two methods to define custom tags:
Tag libraries - used in old versions of JSPTag files - much simpler, introduced in JSP 2.0
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Tag LibrariesA tag library consists of:
Tag handlers - Java classes that define how each of the new tags is translated into Java code
A TLD (Tag Library Descriptor) file, which is an XML file that defines the structure and the implementing class of each tag
(see a tutorial at http://java.sun.com/products/jsp/tutorial/TagLibrariesTOC.html)
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package my;import javax.servlet.jsp.JspException;import javax.servlet.jsp.tagext.SimpleTagSupport;import java.io.IOException;public class DateTag extends SimpleTagSupport { public void doTag() throws JspException, IOException { getJspContext().getOut().print(new java.util.Date()); }}
DateTag.java
A Simple TagLib ExampleA Simple TagLib Example
Using the JSP-context, You can also acquire other implicit objects by calling getSession(), getRequest() etc…
The class file is placed in webapps/myapp/WEB-INF/classes/my/
The java file is placed in webapps/myapp/WEB-INF/src/my/
Base class of tags which don’t handle the body or the attributes
We must use a package (not necessarily named like your application) since this is a helper class which is imported form the JSP’s generated Servlet that is placed within a named package
• Goal: <mytag:date/>
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<taglib>
<tlib-version>1.0</tlib-version><jsp-version>2.0</jsp-version>
<tag>
<name>date</name>
<tagclass>my.DateTag</tagclass>
<body-content>empty</body-content>
</tag>
</taglib>
my-taglib.tld
<%@ taglib prefix=“mytag" uri="/WEB-INF/tags/my-taglib.tld" %>
<html><body>
<h1>Hello. The time is: <mytag:date/></h1>
</body></html>taglibuse.jsp
As you can see from the path, the taglib is specifically defined to the current application context.
The prefix for this tag must appear before the tag itself (looks like a namespace).The Prefix can’t be empty
The path could be a URL.If you choose to use a local path, it must begin with /WEB-INF/tags/
Set this value that indicates your tag library version
Name of the tagTag’s class file in/myapp/WEB-INF/classes/my/
This defined tag contains no body
You can add here more tags…
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Taglib with Attributespackage my;
import javax.servlet.jsp.JspException;
import javax.servlet.jsp.tagext.TagSupport;
import java.io.IOException;
public class DateTag2 extends TagSupport {
private boolean isLongFormat = false;
public void setIsLongFormat(boolean b) {
isLongFormat = b; }
public boolean getIsLongFormat() {
return isLongFormat; {
DateTag2.java
Base class of tags which do handle attributesIn our example the attribute is defined as not required so it must have a default valueAttribute’s setter method
Attribute’s getter method
This member’s name should be identical to the attribute’s.
The setter/getter methods should be named after the attribute (i.e. “get” + capital (<attribute>))
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public int doStartTag() throws JspException { try {
if (isLongFormat) { pageContext.getOut().print(new java.util.Date().getTime()); } else { pageContext.getOut().print(new java.util.Date()); }
} catch (Exception e) { throw new JspException("DateTag: " + e.getMessage()); } return SKIP_BODY; }
public int doEndTag() { return EVAL_PAGE; }}
Invoked when the generated Servlet starts processing the “start tag”
Prints the date according to the isLongFormat attribute
Signals the generated Servlet there’s no body within the tag to process
Invoked when the generated Servlet starts processing the “end tag”
Signals the generated Servlet to continue executing the generated Servlet code
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<tag><name>date2</name><tagclass>my.DateTag2</tagclass><body-content>empty</body-content>
<attribute><name>isLongFormat</name><required>false</required>
</attribute></tag> my-taglib2.tld
<%@ taglib prefix=“mytag" uri="/WEB-INF/tags/my-taglib2.tld" %>
<html><body>
<h1>Hello.</h1>
<h2>The time is: <mytag:date2/></h2>
<h2>Milliseconds since the epoch : <mytag:date2 isLongFormat="true" /></h2>
</body></html>taglibuse2.jsp
Same as before, only with different names for the tagclass
You can put several blocks one after another
The attribute is “not required” so you have to define a default value in DateTag2.java
Uses default attribute value
Uses a given attribute value
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How does it work?
taglibuse2.jsp
taglibuse2_jsp.java
JspContext
DateTag2
setIsLongFormat()
doStartTag()
doEndTag()
JSP to Java Servlet translation
Create the JspContextWhen the
translation engine first encounters <mytag:date2> it creates a new instance of DateTag2 (so we needn’t worry about concurrency issues) and passes it the JspContext reference
The attribute value is set using the setter method.The translator actually translated the attribute string value as it appears in the JSP source, to a boolean value as the Java tag class expects it…
“Start tag” is reached
“End tag” is reached
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Tag FilesJSP 2.0 provides an extremely simplified way
of defining tagsThe motivation: JSP programmers prefer not
to write cumbersome code or class filesThe idea: for each custom tag, write a tag file tagName.tag that implements the tag translation using JSP code
This way, the programmer can avoid creating tag handlers and TLD files
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<%= new java.util.Date() %>
The Simplified Example
<%@ taglib prefix=“mytag" tagdir="/WEB-INF/tags/" %>
<html>
<body>
<h1>Hello. The time is: <mytag:date/></h1>
</body>
</html>
date.tag
taguse.jsp
In this new mechanism we use tagdir instead of uri we used in the old taglib implementation
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<%@ attribute name="isLongFormat" required="false" %>
<%!private String createDate(String isLong) {
if ((isLong == null) || (isLong.equals("false"))) {
return new java.util.Date().toString();}
else { return new Long(new java.util.Date().getTime()).toString();}
} %>
<%=createDate(isLongFormat)%>
The Attributes Example
<%@ taglib prefix=“mytag" tagdir="/WEB-INF/tags/" %>
<html><body>
<h1>Hello.</h1>
<h2>The time is: <mytag:date3/></h2>
<h2>Milliseconds since the epoch : <mytag:date3 isLongFormat="true" /></h2>
</body></html>
date3.tag
taguse3.jsp
Private method declaration
Default and isLongFormat=“false” case
Calls the private method
isLongFormat=“true” case
Default case
isLongFormat=“true”
A new directive
The isLongFormat parameter is identified as the isLongFormat attribute because we used the attribute directive
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Other Capabilities of Custom TagsAttributes
You can add validation mechanism for the attributes values
Tag BodyTag translation may choose to ignore, include
or change the tag body
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JSP Expression LanguageJSP expression language is a comfortable tool
to access useful objects in JSPThis language provides shortcuts in a
somewhat JavaScript-like syntaxAn expression in EL is written as ${expr}For example:
Hi, ${user}. <em style="${style}">Welcome</em>
Note that the EL expression does not violate the XML syntax as opposed to <%= expression %>
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EL VariablesJSP EL does not recognize JSP's implicit
objects, but rather has its own setEach of these objects maps names to values
param, paramValues,
header ,headerValues,
cookie,
initParam,
pageScope, requestScope,
sessionScope, applicationScope
For example, use the param[“x”] or param.x to get the value of the parameter x
Map a parameter name to a single value or to multiple valuesMap a header name to a single value or to multiple valuesMaps a cookie name to a single value
Maps a context initialization parameter name to a single value
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EL Variables (cont)A variable that is not an EL implicit object is
looked up at the page, request, session (if valid) and application scopes
That is, x is evaluated as the first non-null element obtained by executing pageContext.getAttribute("x"), request.getAttribute("x"), etc.
Might be confusing. Make sure you know what you’re accessing!
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Object PropertiesIn JSP EL, Property prop of Object o is referred to
as o[prop]Property prop of Object o is evaluated as follows:
If o is a Map object, then o.get(prop) is returned If o is a List or an array, then prop is converted into
an integer and o.get(prop) or o[prop] is returnedOtherwise, treat o “as a bean”, that is: convert p to a
string, and return the corresponding getter of o, that is o.getProp()
The term o.p is equivalent to o["p"]
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An Example<% response.addCookie(new Cookie(“nameof",“homer"));
session.setAttribute(“homepage", new
java.net.URL("http://www.simpsons.com"));
String[] strs = {"str1","str2"};
session.setAttribute("arr", strs); %>
<html><head><title>JSP Expressions</title></head><body>
<form method="get" action="el.jsp">
<h2>Write the parameter x: <input name="x" type="text" />
<input type="submit" value="send" /></h2>
</form>
</body></html>
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<%@ page isELIgnored="false" %>
<html>
<head><title>EL Examples</title></head>
<h1>Expression-Language Examples</h1>
<h2>Parameter <code>x</code>: ${param["x"]} </h2>
<h2>Cookie <code>name</code>:
${cookie.nameof.value}</h2>
<h2>Header <code>Connection</code>:
${header.Connection} </h2>
<h2>Path of session attr. <code>homepage</code>:
${sessionScope.homepage.path}</h2>
<h2>Element <code>arr[${param.x}]</code>:
${arr[param.x]} </h2>
</body></html>
el.jsp
The default value is TRUE
cookie[“nameof”].getValue()
header [“Connection”]
sessionScope[“homepage”].getPath(). You can omit the sessionScope
${…} means evaluate the expression inside the {}
Only the ${param.x} is evaluatedsessionScope[“arr”]
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Simple XML Production
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE colors SYSTEM "colors.dtd">
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="colors.xsl"?>
<%! static String[] colors = {"red","blue","green"}; %>
<%@ page contentType="text/xml" %>
<colors>
<% for(int i=0; i<3; ++i) { %>
<color id="<%=i%>"><%= colors[i] %></color>
<% } %>
</colors>
JSP directive which sets the MIME-type of the result…
Ordinary XML declarations
Ordinary XML declarations
Link with XSL stylesheet
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Generated XML<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE colors SYSTEM "colors.dtd">
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="colors.xsl"?>
<colors>
<color id="0">red </color>
<color id="1">blue</color>
<color id="2">green</color>
</colors>
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JSPX files are JSP files that have the extension jspx and have XML syntax
JSPX files are also referred to as JSP documentsSpecial JSP tags are used to replace non-XML JSP
symbols (<%, <%@, etc.) (Tags and EL can help too!)
The default content type of JSPX is text/xml (and not text/html)
You can also keep the .jsp suffix and tell the container that a JSP file acts as a JSPX file (and therefore its output is of XML type etc.)
JSPX Files (JSP Documents)
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Advantages/Disadvantages of JSPXSince JSPX documents conform to a legal XML
structure you can:Check if the document is well formed XMLValidate the document against a DTDNest and scope namespaces within the documentUse all kinds of XML tools (e.g. editors)
The main disadvantage is JSPX documents they can grow very long and very (very) cumbersome
Much ado about nothing? Sometimes the above “advantages” simple aren’t needed or are of little help
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<%= Expression %><jsp:expression> Expression </jsp:expression>
<% Code %><jsp:scriptlet> Code
</jsp:scriptlet>
<%! Declaration %><jsp:declaration> Declaration </jsp:declaration>
<%@ Directive %> <jsp:directive.typeAttribute="value"/>
An empty element
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Problems on the Way to a Legal XMLThe XML declaration (<?xml version="1.0"?>) and the
DOCTYPE definition are now those of the JSPX file.How do we include the declaration+dtd of the original
XML document in the result XML?Solution: use the <jsp:output> tag to explicitly require
DOCTYPE and XML declarations (next slide…)
How do we generate dynamic attribute values and still keep the document well formed?
Solution 1: use <jsp:element> for explicit element construction
Solution 2: use an EL expression
The following line is an illegal XML opening tag:<color id=“<jsp:expression>i</jsp:expression>“>
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<?xml version=“1.0” ?><colors xmlns:jsp="http://java.sun.com/JSP/Page"><jsp:output doctype-root-element="colors" doctype-system="colors.dtd" /> <jsp:output omit-xml-declaration="false"/><jsp:declaration>static String[] colors = {"red","blue","green"};</jsp:declaration> <jsp:scriptlet><![CDATA[ for(int i=0; i<3; ++i) { ]]></jsp:scriptlet>
<jsp:element name="color"><jsp:attribute name="id"> <jsp:expression>i</jsp:expression></jsp:attribute>
<jsp:expression>colors[i]</jsp:expression></jsp:element>
<jsp:scriptlet>} </jsp:scriptlet></colors>
Namespace of basic JSP elements and Tag libraries..
Root element + DTD of the resulting XML
Do not omit the XML declaration of the result
The result is equivalent to the original line:
<color id="<%=i%>"><%= colors[i] %></color>
CDATA is used because of <.Altenatively: use <
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A Few More Problems on the WayWhere can we add an XSL declaration? It should
be:outside the root element (colors), but alsoafter jsp:output which must be defined after jsp
namespace declaration within the colors element…When using the include directive, the JSP might
become illegal XML with more than a single root
A solution: Use the <jsp:root> element as the document root
Does this solve all the problems which might arise when using the include directive?
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<?xml version=“1.0” ?><jsp:root version="2.0" xmlns:jsp="http://java.sun.com/JSP/Page"> <jsp:output doctype-root-element="colors" doctype-system="colors.dtd" /> <jsp:output omit-xml-declaration="false"/> <![CDATA[<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="colors.xsl"?>]]> <colors > <jsp:declaration>static String[] colors = {"red","blue","green"}; </jsp:declaration> <jsp:scriptlet><![CDATA[ for(int i=0; i<3; ++i) { ]]></jsp:scriptlet> <jsp:element name="color"> <jsp:attribute name="id"> <jsp:expression>i</jsp:expression></jsp:attribute> <jsp:expression>colors[i]</jsp:expression> </jsp:element> <jsp:scriptlet>}</jsp:scriptlet> </colors>
</jsp:root>
Now we can add the XSL
We use CDATA because of the <?, ?> etc
Still problematic: Which DTD should we use? the DTD should enable every JSP element within every other element…
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LinksJSP Tutorial:
http://courses.coreservlets.com/Course-Materials/csajsp2.html
Advanced Tutorials: http://courses.coreservlets.com/Course-Materials/msajsp.html
JSP API: http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-5.5-doc/jspapi/
JSP Syntax Reference: http://java.sun.com/products/jsp/syntax/2.0/syntaxref20.html
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