Author: irooskov(a)redhat.com
Date: 2012-03-07 19:43:31 -0500 (Wed, 07 Mar 2012)
New Revision: 39360
Modified:
trunk/documentation/guides/GettingStartedGuide/en-US/Book_Info.xml
trunk/documentation/guides/GettingStartedGuide/en-US/jsp_application.xml
trunk/documentation/guides/GettingStartedGuide/en-US/rad_jsf_application.xml
Log:
updated with qe updates
Modified: trunk/documentation/guides/GettingStartedGuide/en-US/Book_Info.xml
===================================================================
--- trunk/documentation/guides/GettingStartedGuide/en-US/Book_Info.xml 2012-03-08 00:36:20
UTC (rev 39359)
+++ trunk/documentation/guides/GettingStartedGuide/en-US/Book_Info.xml 2012-03-08 00:43:31
UTC (rev 39360)
@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
<productname>JBoss Developer Studio</productname>
<productnumber>5.0</productnumber>
<edition>5.0.0</edition>
-<pubsnumber>12</pubsnumber>
+<pubsnumber>13</pubsnumber>
<abstract>
<para>The Getting Started Guide explains the JBoss Developer Studio.</para>
</abstract>
Modified: trunk/documentation/guides/GettingStartedGuide/en-US/jsp_application.xml
===================================================================
--- trunk/documentation/guides/GettingStartedGuide/en-US/jsp_application.xml 2012-03-08
00:36:20 UTC (rev 39359)
+++ trunk/documentation/guides/GettingStartedGuide/en-US/jsp_application.xml 2012-03-08
00:43:31 UTC (rev 39360)
@@ -11,16 +11,15 @@
</keywordset>
</chapterinfo>
<title>Developing a simple JSP web application</title>
- <note>
+<!-- <note>
<title>Note:</title>
<para>
We highly recommend developing in <property>Seam</property>. This
chapter is for users who for some reason cannot use Seam.
</para>
- </note>
+</note> -->
<para>
- In this chapter you'll find out how to create a simple <ulink
-
url="http://java.sun.com/products/jsp/">JSP</ulink> application
using <property>JBoss Developer Studio</property>. The application will show a
classic "Hello World!" on the page.
+ In this chapter you'll find out how to create a simple JSP application using
<property>JBoss Developer Studio</property>. The application will show a
classic "Hello World!" on the page.
</para>
<para>
@@ -263,7 +262,7 @@
<?dbhtml filename="DeployTheProject.html"?>
<title>Deploying the project</title>
<para>
- Writing ant scripts and managing the packaging process can be quite a complicated
and time consuming task for even the most trivial web applications. However,
<property>JBoss Developer Studio</property> relieves you of this burden. All
you need is to start <property>JBoss Server</property> and launch your
application in your favorite browser.
+ Writing ant scripts and managing the packaging process can be quite a complicated
and time consuming task for even the most trivial web applications. However,
<property>JBoss Developer Studio</property> relieves you of this burden. All
you need is to start your <property>JBoss Server</property> and launch your
application in your favorite browser.
</para>
<para>
@@ -274,7 +273,7 @@
<?dbhtml filename="JarConfig.html"?>
<title>JAR Config</title>
<para>
- Project archives managing is available through Project Archives view.
+ Project archives managing is available through the Project Archives view.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
@@ -376,7 +375,7 @@
<?dbhtml filename="AutoRedeploy.html"?>
<title>Auto redeploy</title>
<para>
- When you are creating a web application and register it on <property>JBoss
Server</property> it is automatically deployed into the
<filename>/deploy</filename> directory of the server. JBoss Developer Studio
comes with the feature of auto-redeploy. It means that you don't need to restart
<property>JBoss Server</property>. Any changes made in the application in
exploded format will trigger a redeployment on the server.
+ When you create a web application and register it on the <property>JBoss
Server</property> as it is automatically deployed into the
<filename>/deploy</filename> directory of the server. JBoss Developer
Studio's auto-redeploy feature ensures you do not need to restart the server. Any
changes made in the application in exploded format will trigger a redeployment on the
server.
</para>
<para>
@@ -450,13 +449,13 @@
<?dbhtml filename="LaunchingTheProject.html"?>
<title>Launch JSP Project</title>
<para>
- Let's now launch our project on server. We'll use
<property>JBoss Server</property> that is shipped with <property>JBoss
Developer Studio</property>. You can do it by performing one of the following
actions:
+ Now launch the project onto a JBoss server:
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
- Start JBoss Server from Servers view by clicking the Start the server icon (
+ Start a JBoss Server from the Servers view by clicking the Start the server
icon (
<inlinemediaobject>
<imageobject>
<imagedata
fileref="images/jsp_application/jsp_application_18.png"/>
@@ -499,7 +498,7 @@
</figure>
<para>
- Thus with the help of this chapter you've learnt how to organize a Dynamic
Web Project with a minimal configuration, add new elements to it (in our case
it's just one JSP page) and deploy and run it on the <property>JBoss
Server</property> shipped with <property>JBoss Developer
Studio</property>.
+ You have learnt how to organize a Dynamic Web Project with a minimal configuration,
add new elements to it (in our case it is a JSP page), deploy, and run it on a JBoss
Server from within JBoss Developer Studio.
</para>
</section>
</section>
Modified: trunk/documentation/guides/GettingStartedGuide/en-US/rad_jsf_application.xml
===================================================================
---
trunk/documentation/guides/GettingStartedGuide/en-US/rad_jsf_application.xml 2012-03-08
00:36:20 UTC (rev 39359)
+++
trunk/documentation/guides/GettingStartedGuide/en-US/rad_jsf_application.xml 2012-03-08
00:43:31 UTC (rev 39360)
@@ -9,24 +9,23 @@
<keyword>RAD</keyword>
</keywordset>
</chapterinfo>
- <title>RAD development of a simple JSF application</title>
+ <title>Rapid Application Development of a JSF application</title>
- <note>
+<!-- <note>
<title>Note:</title>
<para>We highly recommend developing in <property>Seam</property>.
This chapter is for users
who for some reason cannot use
<property>Seam</property>.</para>
- </note>
+ </note> -->
- <para>In this chapter you will learn how to create a simple JSF application being
based on the
- <property>"RAD"</property> philosophy. We will
create the familiar
+ <para>In this chapter you will learn how to create a JSF application being based
on the Rapid Application Development (RAD) philosophy. We will create the familiar
Guess Number application. The game is played according to the following rules.
You are asked to guess a number
between 0 and 100. If the guess is correct, a success page is displayed with a
link to play
again. If the guess is incorrect, a message is printed notifying that a smaller
or a larger
number should be entered and the game continues.</para>
- <para>We'll show you how to create such an application from scratch,
along the way
+ <para>You will now learn how to create such an application from scratch, along the
way
demonstrating the powerful features included in JBoss Developer Studio such as
project templating, Visual
Page Editor, code completion and others. You will design the JSF application and
then run
- the application from inside JBoss Developer Studio using the bundled JBoss
server.</para>
+ the application from inside JBoss Developer Studio using a JBoss
server.</para>
<section id="SettingUpTheProject12">
<?dbhtml filename="SettingUpTheProject12.html"?>
@@ -80,7 +79,7 @@
should be tried. The second page is called
<filename>success.jsp</filename>. This page will be shown after you guess
the number correctly. From this page you also have the option to play the
game again.</para>
- <para>Now, we will guide you through the steps on how to do this.</para>
+ <para>Steps for adding two pages to your application:</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>First a folder called <filename>pages</filename> needs to be
created under the <filename>WebContent</filename> folder. To do this right
click on the <filename>WebContent</filename> folder in the Package Explorer
view and select
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>New</guimenuitem><guimenuitem>Folder</guimenuitem></menuchoice>.
Set the <guilabel>Folder Name</guilabel> to
<filename>pages</filename> and click the
<guibutton>Finish</guibutton> button.</para>
@@ -185,9 +184,9 @@
<section id="CreatingResourceFile">
<?dbhtml filename="CreatingResourceFile.html"?>
<title>Creating Resource File</title>
- <para>A resource file is just a file with a
<emphasis>.properties</emphasis> extension for
+ <para>A resource file is a file with a
<emphasis>.properties</emphasis> extension for
collecting text messages in one central place. JBoss Developer Studio allows
you to
- create quickly a resource file. The messages stored in resource file can be
displayed to
+ create quickly a resource file. The messages stored in a resource file can be
displayed to
you on a Web page during application execution. </para>
<para>
With resource file you don't hard code anything into the JSP pages. It also
makes it easier to translate your application to other languages. All you have to do is to
translate all your messages to the other language and save them in a new properties file
with a name that ends with the appropriate ISO-639 language code.