Core JavaServer™ Faces, Second Edition
by David Geary; Cay Horstmann
Seam in Action
by Dan Allen
EJB 3 in Action
by Debu Panda; Reza Rahman; Derek Lane
Head First Java, 2nd Edition
by Kathy Sierra; Bert Bates
Head First Design Patterns
by Eric Freeman; Elisabeth Robson; Kathy Sierra; Bert Bates
Effective Java™, Second Edition
by Joshua Bloch
Java Concurrency in Practice
by Brian Goetz; Tim Peierls; Joshua Bloch; Joseph Bowbeer; David Holmes; Doug Lea
Java Web Services: Up and Running, 1st Edition
by Martin Kalin
A new edition of this title is available, ISBN-10: 0137129394 ISBN-13: 9780137129393
Discover JBoss Seam: the Unified Framework for Simpler, More Powerful Web Development
JBoss Seam integrates EJB 3.0 and JSF components under a unified framework that simplifies and accelerates Java EE web development. Now, JBoss Seam’s project leader and technology evangelist take you inside this powerful new technology, showing exactly how to put it to work.
Michael Yuan and Thomas Heute show how JBoss Seam enables you to create web applications that would have been difficult or impossible with previous Java frameworks. Through hands-on examples and a complete case study application, you’ll learn how to leverage JBoss Seam’s breakthrough state management capabilities; integrate business processes and rules; use AJAX with Seam; and deploy your application into production, one step at a time. Coverage includes
How JBoss Seam builds on—and goes beyond—the Java EE platform
• Using the “Stateful Framework”: conversations, workspaces, concurrent conversations, and transactions
• Integrating the web and data components: validation, clickable data tables, and bookmarkable web pages
• Creating AJAX and custom UI components, enabling AJAX for existing JSF components, and JavaScript integration via Seam Remoting
• Managing business processes, defining stateful pageflows, and implementing rule-based security
• Testing and optimizing JBoss Seam applications
• Deploying in diverse environments: with Tomcat, with production databases, in clusters, without EJB 3, and more
* Download source code for this book’s case study application at http://michaelyuan.com/seam/.
www.prenhallprofessional.com
www.jboss.com
About This Book
About the Authors
Acknowledgments
Part I: Getting Started
Chapter 1: What Is Seam?
Chapter 2: Seam Hello World
Chapter 3: Recommended JSF
Enhancements
Chapter 4: Rapid Application Development
Tools
Part II: Stateful Applications Made
Easy
Chapter 5: An Introduction to Stateful
Framework
Chapter 6: A Simple Stateful
Application
Chapter 7: Conversations
Chapter 8: Workspaces and Concurrent
Conversations
Chapter 9: Transactions
Part III: Integrating Web and Data
Components
Chapter 10: Validate Input Data
Chapter 11: Clickable Data Tables
Chapter 12: Bookmarkable Web Pages
Chapter 13: The Seam CRUD Application
Framework
Chapter 14: Failing Gracefully
Part IV: AJAX Support
Chapter 15: Custom and AJAX UI
Components
Chapter 16: Enabling AJAX for Existing
Components
Chapter 17: Direct JavaScript
Integration
Part V: Business Processes and
Rules
Chapter 18: Managing Business
Processes
Chapter 19: Stateful Pageflows
Chapter 20: Rule-Based Security
Framework
Part VI: Testing Seam Applications
Chapter 21: Unit Testing
Chapter 22: Integration Testing
Part VII: Production Deployment
Chapter 23: Java EE 5.0 Deployment
Chapter 24: Seam Without EJB3
Chapter 25: Tomcat Deployment
Chapter 26: Using a Production
Database
Chapter 27: Performance Tuning and
Clustering
Appendix A: Installing and Deploying JBoss
AS
Appendix B: Using Example Applications as
Templates
Index
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Based on 12 Ratings
Too short - 2008-03-30
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Compared to other computer books this book is to shallow and does not cover the depths of Seam. I would like a more continous example throughout the book instead of a collection of small, rather trivial examples.
good introduction for beginners but not enough for intermediate seam developers - 2009-03-10
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good introduction to jboss seam using a hello world example. this book is perfect for somebody who is a beginner to jboss seam.
On the other hand, for somebody who has already has some experience with jboss seam, this book might not be enough.
Is the future! - 2008-12-09
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For that ones who like to be on cut of the edge, should read it.
Easy to understand and read. Seam is leaving the future choice to be one real and excellent choice for present integrating JSF and EJB 3.x and this book has filled all that I could expect about learn JBoss Seam.
Very good book - 2008-08-19
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Very good book. It gives good knowledge about how to write
applications in this framework. Many working examples are also
appreciated.
In the beginning authors explain what is Seam, and it is understood,
as Seam is much different than any other framework with similar
functionality. Seam is not meant for using it as "white box". It is
rather "black box", designed for just using it, without knowing inside
details. Because of this debugging Seam code is tedious task, and in
fact unnecessary. There is chapter in the book explaining how to use
debugging mechanism built in Seam, so called "debug pages". One can
check session state, stacktrace or JSF components tree. Very helpful
for anyone writing web applications in this framework.
There is also chapter about business processes and business rules.
Yes, this is also built in Seam. As an example in the book is ticket
system. User logs in, lists tasks and assigns them to herself.
Developer does not need to care about storing users tasks in database,
it is enough to set component scope to BUSINESS_PROCESS. This is very
interesting functionality, and although it is explained quite well in
the book, I would like it to be explained even better.
There is good testing support in Seam and this is also well described
in the book. Seam provides tools to do in tests what is normally done
by container, like dependency injection, database and transactions
mocking etc.
Another chapter is about running Seam applications on non-ejb3
containers (like Tomcat).
The book covers many topics, not only about Seam itself, but also
about how to use Seam, test, how to deploy applications on non-seam
container, how to connect to another than default database etc. The
book is targeted for real users, for people working with the
framework.
What I miss is more insight into how Seam internally works. Such
knowledge is not necessary to write working apps, but I just like to
know such things.
Some knowledge about JSF and EJB3 is also very useful when reading
this book. I would like some of this stuff explained, but on the other
hand it is book about Seam not about EJB3/JSF.
I think reading this book is very good for someone who wants to write
applications in Seam, even advanced ones. Seam is interesting
technology, much different than pure JSF+EJB3, and it's worth
learning, even for someone not using it at work, just to see new
possibilities.
Very good introduction to Seam and what WebApp dev should be! - 2008-03-26
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It's not a cookbook with ready made recipes. It gives a shallow but complete overview of the Seam framework features. That is important because if you don't know it exists you will never try to use it. Examples: XHTML validation tags for Hibernate, conversation state, and much more.
It's a must read to get a good start with Seam and to learn what WebApp development should have been from the beginning.
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