----- Original Message -----
> From: Kiran Badi <kiran@poonam.org>
> To: Tomcat Users List <users@tomcat.apache.org>
> Cc: Mark Eggers <its_toasted@yahoo.com>
> Sent: Tuesday, December 6, 2011 3:51 PM
> Subject: Re: How to I add JSTL Lib to Tomcat with Netbeans
>
>T hanks Mark, I have added the jars exactly the way you have given
> suggestions.but for some reasons
>
> <%@ taglib uri="..." %>
>
> is not getting created for my pages.
>
> Let me try to create a simple test case outside the project and see if
> it is installed correctly.
>
>
>
> On 12/6/2011 9:23 AM, Mark Eggers wrote:
>> ----- Original Message -----
>>
>>> From: Kiran Badi<kiran@poonam.org>
>>> To: Tomcat Users List<users@tomcat.apache.org>
>>> Cc:
>>> Sent: Monday, December 5, 2011 6:34 PM
>>> Subject: How to I add JSTL Lib to Tomcat with Netbeans
>>>
>>> Hi
>>>
>>> I have jstl-api-1.2 and jstl-impl-1.2 jars in web/lib folder for my
> project
>>> setting.Is this the right setting to add JSTL jars or I need to add
> this to
>>> tomcats's lib directory ?
>>>
>>> I am using netbeans 7.01 with tomcat 7.0.11 on windows 7.For some
> reasons I feel
>>> that jstl lib is not used by my app and jstl tags are getting ignored.
>>>
>>> Can someone point me to right way to add jstl lib with tomcat ?
>>>
>>> Thanking you
>>> Kiran Badi
>>
>> In Netbeans, you don't add jar files directly to WEB-INF/lib of your
> project. Netbeans does this for you when you build the war file.
>>
>> If you're running a regular Netbeans (ant) project, then do the
> following:
>>
>> 1. Right-mouse click on the Libraries node of your project
>> 2. Select Add libraries
>> 3. Scroll down until you see the JSTL library
>> 4. Select it and add it
>>
>> This will add both the standard tag jar and jstl jar to your project.
> Netbeans will complete<%@ taglib uri="..." %> for you as well
> as all the tags once you add the taglib line to your JSP file.
>>
>> If you're running a Maven project, then you need to edit your pom.xml
> file. The two dependencies go in the dependencies element and will be built into
> your war file under the target directory.
>>
>> Again, once Netbeans knows the libraries are a part of your project
> (sometimes you have to refresh the project) code completion will work as
> expected.
>>
>> In both cases, everything works as expected on the server.
>>
>> This is my normal (occasional) development environment:
>>
>> Platform: Windows/XP Professional SP 3 or Fedora 15
>> JVM: JRE/JDK 1.6.0_29
>> Maven: 3.0.3
>> Servers: Tomcat 5.5.34, Tomcat 6.0.33, Tomcat 7.0.22, Glassfish 3.1
>>
>> Given my limited use, this works pretty well.
>>
>> just my two cents . . . .
>> /mde/
You actually have to type that in. However, Netbeans will auto-complete the URI for you, and
suggest all of the possible URI combinations when you hit Ctrl-space.
So, when you create a new JSP page, you will have to do the following (after you have the
libraries added):
1. type in <%@ taglib u(ctrl-space)
Netbeans will then auto-complete with uri="" and position the cursor in between the quotes
2. type ctrl-space again, and you will get a list of all the possible URIs
3. Pick the right URI (scroll down) and press enter.
4. Press ctrl-space again, and prefix="" will appear (since it's required)
5. Fill in the prefix (c is commonly used for the common tags)
Done . . .
Now Netbeans will auto-complete tags on that page, and Tomcat will use those tags in your
application.
As an aside - don't cc: me and mail to the list. I get everything on the list. I get tons
of mail daily, and extra mail doesn't guarantee a faster or more personal response.
just my two cents . . . .
/mde/
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