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Alexander Kolesnikov

"Tapestry 5: Building Web Applications"

In particular, you
should know how to:
Create a bare-bones Tapestry project using Maven, and then edit, test and
debug it in both NetBeans and Eclipse.
Add pages to the project, maybe placing them into different subdirectories in
order to give your application a logical structure.
Use expansions to display the values of different properties of the page class
(and of properties of those properties too).
Configure Tapestry components on the page in three different ways??”and
you are already familiar with a few components: PageLink, TextField,
Form, and If.
Navigate between different pages of the application, and how to pass values
from page to page if you need to do so.
Create and use Application State Objects. You even know a couple of tricks
that will help you to use ASO more efficiently.
In fact, all you need now to start creating a functionally rich web applications is more
knowledge of Tapestry components??”and this is exactly what we are going to learn
beginning in the next chapter.
In the next chapter, we are going to examine the simplest (and perhaps the most
often used) of Tapestry components. You already know some of them, but even so
there are additional details which you might find useful.


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