On Thu, 10 Jul 2003, Davidson, Glenn wrote:
> Date: Thu, 10 Jul 2003 10:08:15 -0400 > From: "Davidson, Glenn" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Reply-To: Struts Users Mailing List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: 'Struts Users Mailing List' <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Subject: JSTL and JSF What does the future hold? > > Many of us a new to Struts and have limited time to learn new technologies. > I have heard some (not a lot) of hype for Java Server Faces. Being new and > having to learn this technology what recommendation can you give? Should we > skip JSTL? No. The capabilities it provides are very powerful and useful. Learning JSTL now also gives you exposure to the expression language capabilities -- and when you get to JSP 2.0, you'll have the pleasant ability to use those expressions *everywhere* in your page (even in template text), not just in tags that understand it. Struts includes a contributed library called struts-el which recasts some existing Struts tags with support for EL expressions, so Struts and JSTL work very nicely together. If you're using JSP for your rendering technology, you definitely want to use JSTL. > Should we jump to JSF? Many of you on this list are actually > creating these new technologies and we look to you for some guidance. > (Besides being the original developer of Struts, I am the co-specification-lead for JavaServer Faces). You should start learning about JavaServer Faces now, but won't be able to actually deploy anything on it until the spec goes final (later this year) and implementations become available. As with JSTL, there's an opportunity to use Struts and JavaServer Faces together, so that you can use the more powerful component tags instead of the Struts HTML tags, but keep all your back-end Actions and form beans. http://jakarta.apache.org/builds/jakarta-struts/release/struts-faces/ > Thanks > > Glenn > > Craig --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]