JSP makes this job easy by providing you a mechanism where you can make a webpage in such a way that it would refresh automatically after a given interval.
The simplest way of refreshing a web page is using method setIntHeader() of response object. Following is the signature of this method:
public void setIntHeader(String header, int headerValue)This method sends back header "Refresh" to the browser along with an integer value which indicates time interval in seconds.
Auto Page Refresh Example:
Following example would use setIntHeader() method to set Refresh header to simulate a digital clock:<%@ page import="java.io.*,java.util.*" %> <html> <head> <title>Auto Refresh Header Example</title> </head> <body> <center> <h2>Auto Refresh Header Example</h2> <% // Set refresh, autoload time as 5 seconds response.setIntHeader("Refresh", 5); // Get current time Calendar calendar = new GregorianCalendar(); String am_pm; int hour = calendar.get(Calendar.HOUR); int minute = calendar.get(Calendar.MINUTE); int second = calendar.get(Calendar.SECOND); if(calendar.get(Calendar.AM_PM) == 0) am_pm = "AM"; else am_pm = "PM"; String CT = hour+":"+ minute +":"+ second +" "+ am_pm; out.println("Crrent Time: " + CT + "\n"); %> </center> </body> </html>Now put the above code in main.jsp and try to access it. This would display current system time after every 5 seconds as follows. Just run the JSP and wait to see the result:
Auto Refresh Header ExampleCurrent Time is: 9:44:50 PM |
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