No matter how much you try to avoid, when you work with other developers, some of them will still prefer scriptlet and then insert the evil code into the project. Therefore, setting up the project at the first sign is very important if you really want to reduce the scriptlet code. There are several techniques to get over this (including several frameworks that other mentioned). However, if you prefer the pure JSP way, then use the JSTL tag file. The nice thing about this is you can also set up master pages for your project, so the other pages can inherit the master pages
Create a master page called base.tag under your WEB-INF/tags with the following content
<%@tag description="Overall Page template" pageEncoding="UTF-8"%>
<%@attribute name="title" fragment="true" %>
<html>
<head>
<title>
<jsp:invoke fragment="title"></jsp:invoke>
</title>
</head>
<body>
<div id="page-header">
....
</div>
<div id="page-body">
<jsp:doBody/>
</div>
<div id="page-footer">
.....
</div>
</body>
</html>
On this mater page, I created a fragment called "title", so that in the child page, I could insert more codes into this place of the master page. Also, the tag <jsp:doBody/> will be replaced by the content of the child page
Create child page (child.jsp) in your WebContent folder:
<%@ taglib prefix="t" tagdir="/WEB-INF/tags" %>
<t:base>
<jsp:attribute name="title">
<bean:message key="hello.world" />
</jsp:attribute>
<jsp:body>
[Put your content of the child here]
</jsp:body>
</t:base>
<t:base> is used to specify the master page you want to use (which is base.tag at this moment). All the content inside the tag <jsp:body> here will replace the <jsp:doBody/> on your master page. Your child page can also include any tag lib and you can use it normally like the other mentioned. However, if you use any scriptlet code here (<%= request.getParameter("name") %> ...) and try to run this page, you will get a JasperException because Scripting elements ( <%!, <jsp:declaration, <%=, <jsp:expression, <%, <jsp:scriptlet ) are disallowed here. Therefore, there is no way other people can include the evil code into the jsp file
Calling this page from your controller:
You can easily call the child.jsp file from your controller. This also works nice with the struts framework