Setting Up a Page
To use the JavaServer Faces UI components in your JSP page, you need to give the page access to the two standard tag libraries: the JavaServer Faces HTML render kit tag library and the JavaServer Faces core tag library. The JavaServer Faces standard HTML render kit tag library defines tags that represent common HTML user interface components. The JavaServer Faces core tag library defines tags that perform core actions and are independent of a particular render kit.
Using these tag libraries is similar to using any other custom tag library. This chapter assumes that you are familiar with the basics of using custom tags in JSP pages (see Using Custom Tags).
As is the case with any tag library, each JavaServer Faces tag library must have a TLD that describes it. The
html_basicTLD describes the The JavaServer Faces standard HTML render kit tag library. Thejsf_coreTLD describes the JavaServer Faces core tag library.Please refer to the TLD documentation at
http://java.sun.com/j2ee/javaserverfaces/1.1/docs/tlddocs/index.htmlfor a complete list of the JavaServer Faces tags and their attributes.Your application needs access to these TLDs in order for your pages to use them. The Application Server includes these TLDs in
jsf-impl.jar, located in<J2EE_HOME>/lib.To use any of the JavaServer Faces tags, you need to include these taglib directives at the top of each page containing the tags defined by these tag libraries:
<%@ taglib uri="http://java.sun.com/jsf/html" prefix="h" %> <%@ taglib uri="http://java.sun.com/jsf/core" prefix="f" %>The
uriattribute value uniquely identifies the TLD. Theprefixattribute value is used to distinguish tags belonging to the tag library. You can use other prefixes rather than thehorfprefixes. However, you must use the prefix you have chosen when including the tag in the page. For example, theformtag must be referenced in the page via thehprefix because the preceding tag library directive uses thehprefix to distinguish the tags defined inhtml_basic.tld:A page containing JavaServer Faces tags is represented by a tree of components. At the root of the tree is the
UIViewRootcomponent. Theviewtag represents this component on the page. Thus, all component tags on the page must be enclosed in theviewtag, which is defined in thejsf_coreTLD:You can enclose other content, including HTML and other JSP tags, within the
viewtag, but all JavaServer Faces tags must be enclosed within theviewtag.The
viewtag has an optionallocaleattribute. If this attribute is present, its value overrides theLocalestored in theUIViewRootcomponent. This value is specified as aStringand must be of this form:The
:language:,:country:, and:variant:parts of the expression are as specified injava.util.Locale.A typical JSP page includes a form, which is submitted when a button or hyperlink on the page is clicked. For the data of other components on the page to be submitted with the form, the tags representing the components must be nested inside the
formtag. See The UIForm Component for more details on using theformtag.If you want to include a page containing JavaServer Faces tags within another JSP page (which could also contain JavaServer Faces tags), you must enclose the entire nested page in a
subviewtag. You can add thesubviewtag on the parent page and nest ajsp:includeinside it to include the page:You can also include the
subviewtag inside the nested page, but it must enclose all the JavaServer Faces tags on the nested page.In summary, a typical JSP page that uses JavaServer Faces tags will look somewhat like this:
<%@ taglib uri="http://java.sun.com/jsf/html" prefix="h" %> <%@ taglib uri="http://java.sun.com/jsf/core" prefix="f" %> <f:view> <h:form> other JavaServer Faces tags and core tags, including one or more button or hyperlink components for submitting the form </h:form> </f:view>The sections Using the Core Tags and Using the HTML Component Tags describe how to use the core tags from the JavaServer Faces core tag library and the component tags from the JavaServer Faces standard HTML render kit tag library.