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Core Web Programming
By
Larry Brown
and
Marty Hall
Second
edition,
1398
pages
ISBN
0-13-089793-0
Sample Chapter
buy now ยป
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Introduction
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Introduction
In late 1995, Marty Hall proposed a new course for the part-time graduate
program in Computer Science at the Johns Hopkins University. The idea was to
bring together the major Web-related topics in a single course dubbed
"Distributed Development on the World Wide Web," with Java technology as a
unifying theme. Students would look at HTML, Java, HTTP, CGI programming, and
JavaScript, with lots of hands-on projects and no exams. Little did Marty
know what he was getting himself into. By the time the first section was
offered in the summer of 1996, the Java tidal wave had swept through the
university and the companies that the students represented. Shortly after
enrollment opened, the class was filled. There were more students on the
waiting list than in the course. Marty got frantic phone calls from students
insisting that they absolutely had to be in the course. Several local
companies called, asking for on-site courses. What fun!
However, when Marty went shopping for texts over the next semester or two, he
got a rude surprise. Despite the availability of good books in most of the
individual areas he wanted to cover, Marty found that he needed three, four,
or even five separate books to get good coverage of the overall material.
Similarly, for his day job, Marty was constantly switching back and forth
among the best of the huge stack of books he had accumulated and various
on-line references. Surely there was a better way. Shouldn't it be possible
to fit 85 percent of what professional programmers use in about 35 percent of
the space, and get it all in one book?
That was the genesis of the first edition of Core Web Programming. The
book was very popular, but the industry has been rapidly moving since the
book's release. Browsers moved from HTML 3.2 to 4.0. The Java 2 platform was
released, providing greatly improved performance and graphics libraries
suitable for commercial-quality applications. JSP 1.0 came along, resulting
in an explosion of interest in both servlets and JSP as an alternative to CGI
and to proprietary solutions like ASP and Cold-Fusion. XML burst upon the
scene. The server equaled or even surpassed the desktop as the biggest
application area for the Java programming language.
Wow. And demand has only been growing since then. Although readers were
clamoring for a new edition of the book, it was just too much for Marty to
handle alone. Enter Larry Brown, with broad development and teaching
experience in Java and Web technologies, and with particular expertise in the
Java Foundation Classes, multithreaded programming, RMI, and XML processing
with Java. Larry teamed up with Marty to totally update the existing material
to HTML 4, CSS/1, HTTP 1.1, and the Java 2 platform; to replace the CGI
sections with chapters on servlets 2.2 and JSP 1.1; and to add completely new
sections on Swing, Java 2D, and XML processing with JAXP, DOM Level 2, SAX
2.0, and XSLT. They even got a little bit of sleep along the way.
We--Marty and Larry--hope you find the result enjoyable and useful!
Real Code for Real Programmers
This book is aimed at serious software developers. If you are looking for a
book
that shows you how to use a browser, lists the current hottest Web sites, and
pontificates about how Web-enabled applications will revolutionize your
business, you've come to the wrong place. If you're already a programmer of
some sort and want to get started with HTML, XML, Java applets, desktop
applications in Java, servlets, JavaServer Pages, and JavaScript as quickly
as possible, this is the book for you. We illustrate the most important
approaches and warn you of the most common pitfalls. To do so, we include
plenty of working code: over 250 complete Java classes, for instance. We try
to give detailed examples of the most important and frequently used features,
summarize the lesser-used ones, and refer you to the API (available on-line)
for a few of the rarely used ones.
A word of caution, however. Nobody becomes a great developer just by reading.
You have to write some real code too. The more, the better. In each chapter,
we suggest that you start by making a simple program or a small variation of
one of the examples given, then strike off on your own with a more
significant project. Skim the sections you don't plan on using right away,
then come back when you are ready to try them out.
If you do this, you should quickly develop the confidence to handle the
real-world problems that brought you here in the first place. You should be
able to balance the demand for the latest features in Web pages with the need
for multiplatform support. You should be comfortable with frames, style
sheets, and layered HTML. You should be able to make portable stand-alone
graphical applications. You should have no qualms about developing Web
interfaces to your corporate database through JDBC. You should be able to
connect these applications to remote systems over the network. You should
understand how to easily distribute computation among multiple threads, or
even spin it off to separate systems by using RMI. You should be able to
decide where servlets apply well, where JSP is better, and where a
combination is best. You should understand HTTP 1.1 well enough to use its
capabilities to enhance the effectiveness of your pages. You should be able
to spin off complex server-side behaviors into JavaBeans components or custom
JSP tag libraries. You should be able to use JavaScript to validate HTML
forms or to animate Web pages. You should get a raise. A big one,
preferably.
How This Book Is Organized
This book is divided into four parts: HTML, Java programming, server-side
programming, and JavaScript.
Part 1: The HyperText Markup Language
Web pages are created with HTML, the HyperText Markup Language. HTML lets you
mix regular text with special tags that describe the content, layout, or
appearance of the text. These tags are then used by Web browsers like
Netscape Navigator or Microsoft Internet Explorer to format the page. This
first part of the book covers the following topics in HTML.
- HTML 4.01. Full coverage of all the elements in the latest
official HTML standard. Hypertext links, fonts, images, tables, client-side
image maps,
and more.
- Major Netscape and Internet Explorer extensions. Forwarding pages,
using custom colors and font faces, embedding audio, video, and ActiveX
components.
- Frames. Dividing the screen into rectangular regions, each
associated with a separate HTML document. Borderless frames. Floating frames.
Targeting frame cells from hypertext links.
- Cascading style sheets. Level-one style sheets for customizing
fonts, colors, images, text formatting, indentation, lists, and more.
Part 2: Java Programming
Java is a powerful general-purpose programming language that can be used to
create stand-alone programs as well as ones that are embedded in Web pages.
The following Java topics are covered.
- Unique features of Java. What's different about Java? The truth
about Java myths and hype.
- Object-oriented programming in Java. Variables, methods,
constructors, overloading, and interfaces. Modifiers in class declarations.
Packages, the CLASSPATH, and JAR files.
- Java syntax. Primitive types, operators, strings, vectors, arrays,
input/output and the Math class.
- Graphics. Applets. Applications. Drawing, color, font, and
clipping
area operations. Loading and drawing images. Java Plug-In.
- Java 2D. Creating professional, high-quality 2D graphics. Creating
custom shapes, tiling images, using local fonts, creating transparent shapes,
and transforming coordinates.
- Mouse and keyboard events. Processing events. Event types, event
listeners, and low-level event handlers. Inner classes. Anonymous classes.
- Layout managers. FlowLayout, BorderLayout, GridLayout, CardLayout,
GridBagLayout, and BoxLayout. Positioning components by hand. Strategies for
using layout managers effectively.
- AWT components. Canvas, Panel, Applet, ScrollPane, Frame, Dialog,
FileDialog, and Window.Component and Container. Buttons, check boxes, radio
buttons, combo boxes, list boxes, textfields, text areas, labels, scrollbars,
and pop-up menus. Saving and loading windows with object serialization.
- Basic Swing components. Building Swing applets and applications.
Changing the GUI look and feel. Adding custom borders to components. Using
HTML
in labels and buttons. Sending dialog alerts for user input. Adding child
frames
to applications. Building custom toolbars. Implementing a Web browser in
Swing.
- Advanced Swing. JList, JTree, and JTable. Using custom data models
and renderers. Printing Swing components. Updating Swing components in a
thread-safe manner.
- Multithreaded programming. Threads in separate or existing
objects.
Synchronizing access to shared resources. Grouping threads. Multithreaded
graphics and double buffering. Animating images. Controlling timers.
- Network programming. Clients and servers using sockets. The URL
class.
Implementing a generic network server. Creating a simple HTTP server.
Invoking
distributed objects with RMI.
Part 3: Server-Side Programming
Programs that run on a Web server can generate dynamic content based on
client
data. Servlets are Java technology's answer to CGI programming and JSP is
Java's
answer to Active Server Pages or ColdFusion. The following server-side topics
are discussed.
- HTML forms. Sending data from forms. Text controls. Push buttons.
Check
boxes and radio buttons. Combo boxes and list boxes. File upload controls.
Server-side image maps. Hidden fields. Tab ordering.
- Java servlets. The advantages of servlets over competing
technologies.
Servlet life cycle. Servlet initialization parameters. Accessing form data.
Using HTTP 1.1 request headers, response headers, and status codes. Using
cookies in servlets. Session tracking.
- JavaServer Pages (JSP). The benefits of JSP. JSP expressions,
scriptlets,
and declarations. Using JavaBeans components with JSP. Creating custom JSP
tag
libraries. Combining servlets and JSP.
- Using applets as servlet front ends. Sending GET and POST data.
HTTP
tunneling. Using object serialization to exchange high-level data structures
between applets and servlets. Bypassing the HTTP server altogether.
- Java Database Connectivity (JDBC). The seven basic steps in
connecting to
databases. Some utilities that simplify JDBC usage. Formatting a database
result
as plain text or HTML. An interactive graphical query viewer. Precompiled
queries.
- XML processing with Java. Representing an entire XML document by
using the
Document Object Model (DOM) Level 2. Responding to individual XML parsing
events with the Simple API for XML Parsing (SAX) 2.0. Transforming XML with
XSLT. Hiding vendor-specific details with the Java API for XML Processing
(JAXP).
Part 4: JavaScript
JavaScript is a scripting language that can be embedded in Web pages and
interpreted as the pages are loaded. The final part covers the following
JavaScript topics.
- JavaScript syntax. Fields, methods, functions, strings, objects,
arrays, and regular expressions.
- Customizing Web pages. Adapting to different browsers, JavaScript
releases, and screen sizes.
- Making pages dynamic. Animating images. Manipulating layers.
Responding to
user events.
- Validating HTML forms. Checking form entries as they are changed.
Checking data when form is submitted.
- Handling cookies. Reading and setting values. The Cookie object.
- Controlling frames. Sending results to specific frames. Preventing
documents from being framed. Updating multiple frame cells. Giving frame
cells the focus automatically.
- Integrating Java and JavaScript. LiveConnect and the JSObject
class.
- JavaScript quick reference. Major classes in JavaScript 1.2. All
fields, methods, and event handlers. Document, Window, Form, Element, String,
Math, RegExp, and so forth.
About the Web Site
The book has a companion Web site at:
http://www.corewebprogramming.
com/
This free site includes:
- Documented source code for all examples shown in the book; this code can
be
downloaded for unrestricted use.
- On-line versions of all HTML pages, Java applets, and JavaScript
examples.
- Links to all URLs mentioned in the text of the book.
- Information on book discounts.
- Reports on Java short courses.
- Book additions, updates, and news. A free Ronco combination paring knife
and
e-commerce tool. OK, maybe not.
About the Authors
Marty Hall is a Senior Computer Scientist in the Research and
Technology Development Center at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics
Lab, where he specializes in the application of Java and Web technology to
customer problems. He also teaches Java and Web programming in the Johns
Hopkins part-time graduate program in Computer Science, where he directs the
Distributed Computing and Web Technology concentration areas. When he gets a
chance, he also teaches industry short courses on servlets, JavaServer Pages,
and other Java technology areas. He is the author of Core Servlets and JavaServer
Pages and the first edition of Core Web Programming. Marty can
be reached at the following address:
Research and Technology Development Center
The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
11100 Johns Hopkins Road
Laurel, MD 20723
hall@corewebprogramming.com
Larry Brown is a Senior Network Engineer at the Naval Surface Warfare
Center, Carderock Division, where he specializes in developing and deploying
network and Web solutions in an enterprise environment. He is also a Computer
Science faculty member at the Johns Hopkins University, where he teaches
server-side programming, distributed Web programming, and Java user interface
development for the part-time graduate program in Computer Science. Larry can
be reached at the following address:
Naval Surface Warfare Center, Carderock Division
9500 MacArthur Boulevard
West Bethesda, MD 20817
brown@corewebprogramming.com
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