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Jakarta Faces, formerly Jakarta Server Faces and JavaServer Faces (JSF) is a Java specification for building component-based user interfaces for web applications. [2] It was formalized as a standard through the Java Community Process as part of the Java Platform, Enterprise Edition .
Apache MyFaces is an Apache Software Foundation project that creates and maintains an open-source JavaServer Faces implementation, along with several libraries of JSF components that can be deployed on the core implementation. The project is divided into several sub-projects:
New themes and components, file upload and download changes, improved implementation of JSF Client Window mode, new audio and video components, observer/event based p:autoUpdate, supports JSF 3.0 PrimeFaces 11.0 2021-12-09 [8] PrimeFaces 12.0 2022-11-14 [9] PrimeFaces 13.0 2023-07-24 PrimeFaces 14.0 2024-05-01 [10]
In computing, Facelets is an open-source Web template system under the Apache license and the default view handler technology (aka view declaration language) for Jakarta Faces (JSF; formerly Jakarta Server Faces and JavaServer Faces). The language requires valid input XML documents to work.
JavaServer Faces (JSF) ADF Faces - an Oracle implementation of JavaServer Faces [1] Facelets; ADF Mobile browser - based on Apache Trinidad; Excel through ADF desktop integration; The Oracle JDeveloper free Integrated Development Environment provides a graphical interface for creating data-management applications using ADF.
The code sample shown below demonstrates how various technologies in Java EE 7 are used together to build a web form for editing a user. In Jakarta EE a (web) UI can be built using Jakarta Servlet, Jakarta Server Pages (JSP), or Jakarta Faces (JSF) with Facelets. The example below uses Faces and Facelets. Not explicitly shown is that the input ...
Omnifaces was created in response to seeing the same questions and the same example and utility code posted over and over again. [1] It simply comes as an answer to day-by-day problems encountered during working with JSF (e.g. bug fixing, pitfalls, missing features, missing utilities, common questions, etc.).
Ajax4jsf became an open-source project hosted on java.net, while RichFaces became a commercial JSF component library. In March 2007 JBoss (a division of Red Hat from 2006) and Exadel signed a partnership agreement whereby Ajax4jsf and RichFaces would come under the JBoss umbrella as "JBoss Ajax4jsf" and as "JBoss RichFaces".