1、JAVA外文文献翻译JAVA外文文献翻译Java and the Internet If Java is, in fact, yet another computer programming language, you may question why it is so important and why it is being promoted as a revolutionary step in computer programming. The answer isnt immediately obvious if youre coming from a traditional progr
2、amming perspective. Although Java is very useful for solving traditional stand-alone programming problems, it is also important because it will solve programming problems on the World Wide Web. 1. Client-side programming The Webs initial server-browser design provided for interactive content, but th
3、e interactivity was completely provided by the server. The server produced static pages for the client browser, which would simply interpret and display them. Basic HTML contains simple mechanisms for data gathering: text-entry boxes, check boxes, radio boxes, lists and drop-down lists, as well as a
4、 button that can only be programmed to reset the data on the form or “submit” the data on the form back to the server. This submission passes through the Common Gateway Interface (CGI) provided on all Web servers. The text within the submission tells CGI what to do with it. The most common action is
5、 to run a program located on the server in a directory thats typically called “cgi-bin.” (If you watch the address window at the top of your browser when you push a button on a Web page, you can sometimes see “cgi-bin” within all the gobbledygook there.) These programs can be written in most languag
6、es. Perl is a common choice because it is designed for text manipulation and is interpreted, so it can be installed on any server regardless of processor or operating system. Many powerful Web sites today are built strictly on CGI, and you can in fact do nearly anything with it. However, Web sites b
7、uilt on CGI programs can rapidly become overly complicated to maintain, and there is also the problem of response time. The response of a CGI program depends on how much data must 1 be sent, as well as the load on both the server and the Internet. (On top of this, starting a CGI program tends to be
8、slow.) The initial designers of the Web did not foresee how rapidly this bandwidth would be exhausted for the kinds of applications people developed. For example, any sort of dynamic graphing is nearly impossible to perform with consistency because a GIF file must be created and moved from the serve
9、r to the client for each version of the graph. And youve no doubt had direct experience with something as simple as validating the data on an input form. You press the submit button on a page; the data is shipped back to the server; the server starts a CGI program that discovers an error, formats an
10、 HTML page informing you of the error, and then sends the page back to you; you must then back up a page and try again. Not only is this slow, its inelegant. The solution is client-side programming. Most machines that run Web browsers are powerful engines capable of doing vast work, and with the ori
11、ginal static HTML approach they are sitting there, just idly waiting for the server to dish up the next page. Client-side programming means that the Web browser is harnessed to do whatever work it can, and the result for the user is a much speedier and more interactive experience at your Web site. T
12、he problem with discussions of client-side programming is that they arent very different from discussions of programming in general. The parameters are almost the same, but the platform is different: a Web browser is like a limited operating system. In the end, you must still program, and this accou
13、nts for the dizzying array of problems and solutions produced by client-side programming. The rest of this section provides an overview of the issues and approaches in client-side programming. 2.Plug-ins One of the most significant steps forward in client-side programming is the development of the p
14、lug-in. This is a way for a programmer to add new functionality to the browser by downloading a piece of code that plugs itself into the appropriate spot in the browser. It tells the browser “from now on you can 2 perform this new activity.” (You need to download the plug-in only once.) Some fast an
15、d powerful behavior is added to browsers via plug-ins, but writing a plug-in is not a trivial task, and isnt something youd want to do as part of the process of building a particular site. The value of the plug-in for client-side programming is that it allows an expert programmer to develop a new la
16、nguage and add that language to a browser without the permission of the browser manufacturer. Thus, plug-ins provide a “back door” that allows the creation of new client-side programming languages (although not all languages are implemented as plug-ins). 3.Scripting languages Plug-ins resulted in an
17、 explosion of scripting languages. With a scripting language you embed the source code for your client-side program directly into the HTML page, and the plug-in that interprets that language is automatically activated while the HTML page is being displayed. Scripting languages tend to be reasonably
18、easy to understand and, because they are simply text that is part of an HTML page, they load very quickly as part of the single server hit required to procure that page. The trade-off is that your code is exposed for everyone to see (and steal). Generally, however, you arent doing amazingly sophisti
19、cated things with scripting languages so this is not too much of a hardship. This points out that the scripting languages used inside Web browsers are really intended to solve specific types of problems, primarily the creation of richer and more interactive graphical user interfaces (GUIs). However,
20、 a scripting language might solve 80 percent of the problems encountered in client-side programming. Your problems might very well fit completely within that 80 percent, and since scripting languages can allow easier and faster development, you should probably consider a scripting language before lo
21、oking at a more involved solution such as Java or ActiveX programming. The most commonly discussed browser scripting languages are JavaScript (which has nothing to do with Java; its named that way just to grab some of Javas marketing momentum), VBScript (which looks like Visual Basic), and 3 Tcl/Tk,
22、 which comes from the popular cross-platform GUI-building language. There are others out there, and no doubt more in development. JavaScript is probably the most commonly supported. It comes built into both Netscape Navigator and the Microsoft Internet Explorer (IE). In addition, there are probably
23、more JavaScript books available than there are for the other browser languages, and some tools automatically create pages using JavaScript. However, if youre already fluent in Visual Basic or Tcl/Tk, youll be more productive using those scripting languages rather than learning a new one. (Youll have
24、 your hands full dealing with the Web issues already.) 4.Java If a scripting language can solve 80 percent of the client-side programming problems, what about the other 20 percentthe “really hard stuff?” The most popular solution today is Java. Not only is it a powerful programming language built to
25、 be secure, cross-platform, and international, but Java is being continually extended to provide language features and libraries that elegantly handle problems that are difficult in traditional programming languages, such as multithreading, database access, network programming, and distributed compu
26、ting. Java allows client-side programming via the applet. An applet is a mini-program that will run only under a Web browser. The applet is downloaded automatically as part of a Web page (just as, for example, a graphic is automatically downloaded). When the applet is activated it executes a program
27、. This is part of its beautyit provides you with a way to automatically distribute the client software from the server at the time the user needs the client software, and no sooner. The user gets the latest version of the client software without fail and without difficult reinstallation. Because of
28、the way Java is designed, the programmer needs to create only a single program, and that program automatically works with all computers that have browsers with built-in Java interpreters. (This safely includes the vast majority of machines.) Since Java is a full-fledged programming language, you can
29、 do as much work as possible on the client before and after making requests of the 4 server. For example, you wont need to send a request form across the Internet to discover that youve gotten a date or some other parameter wrong, and your client computer can quickly do the work of plotting data ins
30、tead of waiting for the server to make a plot and ship a graphic image back to you. Not only do you get the immediate win of speed and responsiveness, but the general network traffic and load on servers can be reduced, preventing the entire Internet from slowing down. One advantage a Java applet has
31、 over a scripted program is that its in compiled form, so the source code isnt available to the client. On the other hand, a Java applet can be decompiled without too much trouble, but hiding your code is often not an important issue. Two other factors can be important. As you will see later in this
32、 book, a compiled Java applet can comprise many modules and take multiple server “hits” (accesses) to download. (In Java 1.1 and higher this is minimized by Java archives, called JAR files, that allow all the required modules to be packaged together and compressed for a single download.) A scripted
33、program will just be integrated into the Web page as part of its text (and will generally be smaller and reduce server hits). This could be important to the responsiveness of your Web site. Another factor is the all-important learning curve. Regardless of what youve heard, Java is not a trivial language to learn. If
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