In this part (4) of the tutorial we will correct the bugs inherent in version 2.2 of Seam-gen and we will add some code to spice up our blog CMS. First of all, our PostEdit.seam page is not working at all as it is. We shall fix this: Open PostEdit.xhtml from the WebContent folder and find the <rich:tabPanel switchType=”ajax”> block. This is what’s causing the problem, because it has more than one tab – one …
In this part III of the tutorial, we’ll build the entity classes from the database we created in Part I and configure the Seam project we created in Part II so as to make it fully compatible with Apache Tomcat. Creating The Model Layer We’ll use Hibernate‘s reverse engineering tool (hbm2java) embedded in Seam-gen to create the entity classes from the database we created in part 1. Right-click the project blog in project explorer and …
In part I of the tutorial, I provided the instructions about the development environment and how to create the blog’s database. In this part II, using Eclipse’s JBoss tools plugin, we’ll create and configure the JBoss Seam web project and prepare it for full Tomcat-compatibilty and for the creation the basic CRUD (create, read, update and delete) functionality of entities which will be reverse engineered from the database using hbm2java embedded in Seam-gen whose GUI version comes built-in …
Tired of simple hello world tutorials or tutorials taking you only as far as user login and registration examples? Here’s an intermediate-level tutorial in which I will demonstrate how to make a blog CMS application using JBoss Seam incorporating JSF (w/Facelets), Hibernate JPA and how to deploy it to Apache Tomcat web server. With this tutorial, I also aim to provide complete and correct instructions for preparing a Seam 2.2 project to be deployed on Tomcat without …