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split portlet back to its own page, as standards are platform independent and this is an example, as specified in the body. |
c/e to clarify JSR abbreviation, which is the Java Specification Request, not an abbreviation of Java Portlet Specification |
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{{Short description|Technical standard}}
{{more citations needed|date=January 2013}}
A '''Java Portlet Specification'''
== Background ==
=== Portlets ===
{{Main|
A [[portlet]] is a [[Pluggable look and feel|pluggable]] [[user interface]] [[software component]] that is managed and displayed in a [[web portal]]. A portlet responds to requests from a web client with and generates dynamic content. Some examples of portlet applications are [[e-mail]], [[weather forecasting|weather reports]], [[discussion forum]]s, and [[news]].
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=== JSR 286 ===
'''JSR-286''' is the Java Portlet
{{cite web | last = Hepper | first = Stefan | title = What's new in the Java Portlet Specification V2.0 (JSR 286)? | publisher = IBM | date = 18 March 2008 | url =http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/websphere/library/techarticles/0803_hepper/0803_hepper.html }}</ref>
* Inter-Portlet Communication through events and public render parameters
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=== JSR 362 ===
'''JSR-362''' is the Java Portlet
{{cite web | last = Nicklous | first = Martin (Scott) | title = Portlet Specification 3.0 is Here! | publisher = IBM | date = September 2016 | url = https://static.rainfocus.com/oracle/oow16/sess/1462801563632001pOv8/ppt/JSR362-JavaOne-2016a.pdf }}</ref>
* Resource Dependencies
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