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Home/ Questions/Q 6019781
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T03:28:15+00:00 2026-05-23T03:28:15+00:00

I would like to know when an application can be called a Java EE

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I would like to know when an application can be called a Java EE application or a normal web application? Or could all web applications be called a Java EE application if they contain JSP, JSF, Servlets, beans, JDBC etc?

Could someone provide some insight into this?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T03:28:16+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 3:28 am

    A J2EE application is in a web application which is developed using the currently outdated J2EE technologies. J2EE does initially not cover JSF at all. It’s more than often Struts, Spring and/or Hibernate.

    J2EE has been upgraded to Java EE since the introduction of Java EE 5.0 at May of 2006 (yes, that’s over 5 years ago!). Java EE 5.0 was the first to include JSF in the specification to supplant 3rd party MVC frameworks like Struts. Also JPA has made its way into Java EE to supplant 3rd party ORM frameworks like Hibernate. Java EE 6.0 was the first to include CDI in the specification to supplant 3rd party IoC frameworks like Spring.

    I consider an application a "web application" when it runs on a web server and can be accessed using a web browser. I consider an application a J2EE application when it is a web application which uses outdated J2EE technologies. I consider an application a Java EE application when it is a web application which runs on at least Java 1.5 and uses at least Java EE 5.0 technologies.

    See also:

    • Wikipedia – Java EE version history
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