Download
FAQ History |
API
Search Feedback |
Creating Static Content
You create static content in a JSP page simply by writing it as if you were creating a page that consisted only of that content. Static content can be expressed in any text-based format, such as HTML, Wireless Markup Language (WML), and XML. The default format is HTML. If you want to use a format other than HTML, at the beginning of your JSP page you include a
page
directive with thecontentType
attribute set to the content type. The purpose of thecontentType
directive is to allow the browser to correctly interpret the resulting content. So if you wanted a page to contain data expressed in WML, you would include the following directive:A registry of content type names is kept by the IANA at
Response and Page Encoding
You also use the
contentType
attribute to specify the encoding of the response. For example, the date application specifies that the page should be encoded using UTF-8, an encoding that supports almost all locales, using the followingpage
directive:If the response encoding weren't set, the localized dates would not be rendered correctly.
To set the source encoding of the page itself, you would use the following
page
directive.You can also set the page encoding of a set of JSP pages. The value of the page encoding varies depending on the configuration specified in the JSP configuration section of the Web application deployment descriptor (see Declaring Page Encodings
)
.
Download
FAQ History |
API
Search Feedback |
All of the material in The J2EE(TM) 1.4 Tutorial is copyright-protected and may not be published in other works without express written permission from Sun Microsystems.