The .war is served from GlassFish v3. I am trying to include a javascript file from my jspx.
<script type="text/javascript" src="/base/interface/Service.js"></script>
I get the following in my http response
<script src="/base/interface/Service.js" type="text/javascript" />
The problem is that it should include the </script>
tag. I believe this is why it works on Chrome, but not on Firefox or IE. Any idea how to force <script></script>
Update: Not sure if any of this is pertinent, but here is the beginning of my jspx file
<jsp:root version="2.0"
xmlns:jsp="http://java.sun.com/JSP/Page"
xmlns:c="http://java.sun.com/jsp/jstl/core"
xmlns:fmt="http://java.sun.com/jsp/jstl/fmt"
xmlns:form="http://www.springframework.org/tags/form"
xmlns:spring="http://www.springframework.org/tags"
xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<jsp:output doctype-root-element="html"
doctype-public="-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
doctype-system="http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"/>
<jsp:directive.page contentType="text/html" pageEncoding="UTF-8"/>
...
A potentially cleaner solution would be to create a custom taglib that outputs correct HTML, e.g.:
producing:
Another alternative would be to encapsulate the tag in CDATA:
I covered this topic in more detail here: How to produce valid HTML with JSPX? (not XHTML)
I used
<script ...><jsp:text> </jsp:text></script>
and that retained the closing tag. I think this is ugly, so if anyone has a better answer I would definitely be interested.Unfortunately, jspx is known to "minimize" empty elements. One way to prevent the minimization without adding a space to the rendered HTML is to insert a comment. For example:
It is still ugly, though.
Yet another ugly solution: