Articles
On this site:
- Best Practices for Using the Java Collections API
- The Collections API has been available since Java 1.2, but many programmers still rely on legacy collection classes like Hashtable and Vector when there are more flexible alternatives available. This article explains the three interfaces that are the basis of the Collections API—Sets, Lists, and Maps—and how an understanding of them can make the applications you build more rigorous and flexible.
[ read article ]
- Getting Struts' <html:optionsCollection> tag to work for you
- The struts-html tag library provides many tags that support persistence of user-entered form data between HTTP requests. The <html:optionsCollection> tag enables the labels and values associated with <OPTION> tags in a <SELECT> dropdown to be populated from a domain dynamically defined by the application, but the documentation about this tag is somewhat vague and confusing. This article explains how to make use of this tag in your Struts application.
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Elsewhere:
- Who Says You Can't Take It With You?
- article on popART web-based e-mail system
- A Brief History of Tags
- article in Java Developer's Journal
- Interview with Leon Shklar
- Scott Swigart and Sean Campbell talk to Leon for the How Software Is Built blog.
- An Application Development Framework for the Virtual Web
- with Dave Makower, Evan Maloney, and Sveta Gurevich
- Java, RDF, and the Virtual Web
- series of articles at developer.com
[ part 1 ]
[ part 2 ]
[ part 3 ]
- Java Technology Design Patterns for High Load Web Sites
- with John Burket
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