![]() JSF 4.0 () – Major features: Deleted some deprecated things (native managed beans, native EL references), no extended view by default, added ClientWindowScoped.JSF 2.0 also includes a number of other changes like adding support for events, separate development, staging, and production modes, similar to RAILS_ENV in Ruby on Rails, and significantly expanding the standard set of components. ![]() This includes logical naming and versioning of resources. ![]() The latest JSF release has built-in support for handling resources like images, CSS and Javascript, allowing artifacts to be included with component libraries, separated into JAR files, or simply co-located into a consistent place within the Web application. The addition of Partial State Saving and Document Object Model (DOM) updates are part of the built-in standardized AJAX support. Page transitions can be invoked simply by passing the name of the desired View or Facelet. Navigation is also simplified, removing the need for faces-config.xml navigation cases. The new JSF developments also provide wide accessibility to Java annotations such as and that removes the need for faces-config.xml, in all cases except framework extension. ![]() This eliminates the life-cycle conflicts that existed with JSP, forcing workarounds by Java developers. Latest developments įacelets (which was designed specifically for Java Server Faces) was adopted as the official view technology for JSF 2.0. In June 2001, JavaWorld would report on Amy Fowler's team's design of "the JavaServer Faces API" (also known as "Moonwalk") as "an application framework for creating Web-based user interfaces". In 2001, the original Java Specification Request (JSR) for the technology that ultimately became JavaServer Faces proposed developing a package with the name ![]()
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