Helpful votes received on reviews, lists & guides:
100% (4 of 4)
Location: Laurel, MD USA
Birthday: March 20(Saved Remind mePlease RetryPlease Retry)
Biography:
Dan Allen is an software consultant, author, and open source advocate. After graduating from Cornell University with a degree in Materials Science and Engineering in 2000, Dan became captivated by the world of free and open source software and has been involved in the community ever since. He later discovered the combination of Linux and the Java EE platform to be the ideal blend on which to base … Read moreDan Allen is an software consultant, author, and open source advocate. After graduating from Cornell University with a degree in Materials Science and Engineering in 2000, Dan became captivated by the world of free and open source software and has been involved in the community ever since. He later discovered the combination of Linux and the Java EE platform to be the ideal blend on which to base his professional career.
In Dan's search for a robust web framework, he happened upon JBoss Seam, which was quickly granted the most distinguished spot in his development toolbox. In the past year, Dan has published a three part series on Seam for IBM developerWorks and authored Seam in Action for Manning Publications. He is also a committer on the Seam project and active participant in the community.
Dan has logged many years of experience with enterprise Java and has been plugging away at web-based software in general for nearly a decade. Dan has mastered Java technologies which include Seam, EJB3, JSF, Spring, Hibernate, Maven 2, and Groovy, amongst others. None of his success would have been possible, though, without immense support from his wife, Sarah, with whom he lives, along with their chinchilla, in Laurel, MD.
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Reviews
Classic Reviewer Rank: 1,104,341
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
For as big an impact RichFaces and Ajax4jsf have had on JSF adoption, there's no question that there has been a dearth of good documentation on the subject. So how practice is RichFaces, really? That's the question Max Katz answers in his recently released Apress book, Practical RichFaces. At last, the missing manual has been discovered!
If you have ever perused the RichFaces documentation, you'll agree that it leaves out the bigger picture of how RichFaces works, in particular the underlying Ajax4jsf mechanism (i.e., the behavior provided by <a4j:support>). I can attest to the observation the author states in the introduction that a lot of developers are using the tags and… Read more
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