| Similar Articles |
 |
JavaWorld August 2001 Rinaldo Di Giorgio |
Serve clients' specific protocol requirements with Brazil, Part 5 How to use Brazil to process content from diverse Websites, tailor the content to reflect a user's desires, and provide the content as a Web service -- and how to use Brazil to integrate new technologies with legacy Web applications that aren't XML-enabled...  |
JavaWorld August 2000 Rinaldo Di Giorgio |
Serve clients' specific protocol requirements with Brazil, Part 1 The Brazil sever can deliver data to clients requiring such specific protocols or technologies as the simple HTTP via URL programming interface, the Java Reliable Multicast Service protocol, Java Message Service, and Jini. Plus, how to use applets, JavaScript, and the Brazil Scripting Language to rapidly create Webpages.  |
JavaWorld February 2002 Julien Mercay & Gilbert Bouzeid |
Boost Struts with XSLT and XML Struts is an innovative server-side Java framework designed to build Web applications. This article introduces the processing model underlying Struts, describes the Struts framework itself, and presents Model 2X, which enhances Struts...  |
JavaWorld November 14, 2003 Allen Holub |
Create client-side user interfaces in HTML, Part 2 This "Create Client-Side User Interfaces in HTML" series continues by examining the HTMLPane sources. Part 2 offers examples of how to customize the JEditorPane to support custom tags and also provides an extended description of the Factory Method design pattern.  |
JavaWorld February 2002 Victor Okunev |
Generate JavaBean classes dynamically with XSLT For some projects, you need a more flexible business object structure. This article lays a foundation for a simple framework to build truly adaptive systems, saving you hours of routine programming...  |
JavaWorld September 2001 Dirk Reinshagen |
XML messaging, Part 3 This article introduces the JAXM API and the ebXML XML messaging standard. These two standards, working together, enable you to send SOAP messages in a message-oriented fashion...  |
JavaWorld October 3, 2003 Allen Holub |
Create client-side user interfaces in HTML This article presents a variant on Swing's JEditorPane that makes it possible to specify an entire screen of your client-side user interface (UI) in HTML.  |
JavaWorld January 2001 Rinaldo Di Giorgio |
Serve clients' specific protocol requirements with Brazil, Part 3 The author shows how the Brazil server transmits weather data to wireless clients...  |
JavaWorld February 2002 Steve Ditlinger |
Mix protocols transparently in Web applications To maintain the security of sensitive data as it travels over the Internet to or from the browser, Web applications often rely on Secure Sockets Layer. The secure Webpages and processes that transmit sensitive data utilize HTTP over SSL (HTTPS) rather than the usual HTTP. Integrating SSL into a Web application should prove seamless and simple to implement as well as maintain. This article explores typical SSL implementations and develops an SSL solution using the J2EE servlet redirect mechanism to protect sensitive data transmission. It also develops an overall solution combining JavaServer Pages custom tags and an application-specific servlet base class.  |
JavaWorld September 2002 Joe Walker |
XML glossary With XML evolving at a rapid pace, many developers get lost in a sea of acronyms. This article defines many XML technologies crucial to Java developers  |
JavaWorld December 2001 Joshua Fox |
Deploy code servers in Jini systems Jini is a simple architecture for distributed systems, but developers often find that deploying a Jini system, and running multiple HTTP servers in particular, can be challenging. This article describes several solutions to this problem, and covers the advantages and disadvantages of each solution, such as scripts, embedded HTTP servers, all-in-one Jini systems, and enterprise-class HTTP servers.  |
JavaWorld November 2000 Geoff Friesen |
Applications, applets, and hybrids This article establishes our bearings and sets sail to the land of applications, applets, and hybrids (an unusual category of Java programs)...  |
JavaWorld April 25, 2003 Anthony Karre |
A do-it-yourself framework for grid computing Large-scale grid computing frameworks can be successfully used to build computational grid infrastructures, but their sophistication can also be a barrier for software designers experimenting with entry-level grid computing.  |
JavaWorld October 3, 2003 Dawid Weiss |
Discover new dimensions of scripted Java This article presents an extension to BeanShell that turns scripts into real Java classes that support inheritance, Java reflection, method overriding, and so on. The extension is designed to be fully transparent to the Java application using it.  |
JavaWorld October 2000 Rinaldo Di Giorgio |
Serve clients' specific protocol requirements with Brazil, Part 2 How to use XML to facilitate data exchange between applications.... How you apply XML to exchange weather data... Scripting languages that you can implement to efficiently and quickly produce XML-tagged data... etc.  |
JavaWorld June 2002 Jason Byassee |
Unleash mobile agents using Jini Mobile agents are powerful, versatile, and -- possibly most important -- fun to work with. Java's Jini framework facilitates mobile agent application development, providing key features for distributed network programming.  |
JavaWorld November 2001 Bishop & Warren |
Jini-like discovery for RMI Not yet on the Jini bandwagon? Despite its powerful mechanisms, Jini has yet to be accepted in mainstream Java development. Until that happens, developers need to find better Remote Method Invocation (RMI) solutions. This article walks you through a Jini-like discovery mechanism for your RMI development.  |
JavaWorld December 5, 2003 Borislav Iordanov |
Dynamic server includes with local runtime context This article shows how to achieve true black-box reuse of frontend logic in the form of JSP pages or Java servlets, by wrapping the servlet request object and effectively creating a local runtime context for an included resource.  |
JavaWorld August 29, 2003 David Geary |
Follow the Chain of Responsibility The Chain of Responsibility (CoR) pattern decouples the sender and receiver of a request by interposing a chain of objects between them. This article discusses the CoR pattern and two implementations of that pattern in the Java APIs -- one from client-side Java and the other from server-side.  |
JavaWorld December 2001 Geir Magnusson Jr. |
Start up the Velocity Template Engine The Velocity Template Engine lets you render data from within applications and servlets. This article introduces the Velocity Template Language (VTL) and provides examples of how to use the Velocity engine, including how to generate Web content in a Java servlet environment...  |
JavaWorld March 2001 Michael C. Daconta |
Dodge the traps hiding in the URLConnection class This article focuses on problems with posting to an HTTP URL and the bane of new Java programmers, the NoClassDefFoundError...  |
JavaWorld September 2000 Andre Tost |
XML document processing in Java using XPath and XSLT The XSLT and XPath standards provide a way of handling certain problems that is more elegant and efficient than simply using the DOM API. In fact, using DOM, XSLT, and XPath together, applying each to different problems, will lead to the best code...  |
JavaWorld December 2001 Taylor Cowan |
XSLT blooms with Java XSLT (Extensible Stylesheet Language Transformation) offers an excellent vehicle for styling XML documents as HTML. However, it shows some weakness when the transformation requires extensive logic. When XSLT languages fail to complete the job, you can extend your stylesheets with Java classes and take advantage of both languages' features. This article demonstrates how to extend XSLT with Java. You will learn how to instantiate and invoke methods on Java objects from within an XSLT stylesheet. The article also demonstrates how XML nodes are passed to Java classes and returned back to the stylesheet for further processing.  |
JavaWorld March 2001 Jeffrey Peden |
Browse user interfaces for Jini services The ServiceUI specification developed by the Jini.org community defines a suggested procedure for attaching user interfaces to Jini services...  |
JavaWorld November 2002 B.J. Fesq |
Sun boosts enterprise Java This article provides a clear understanding of the enterprise Java platform's direction and introduces J2EE (Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition) 1.4's support for emerging Web services standards.  |
JavaWorld September 2000 Frank Sommers |
Activatable Jini services, Part 1: Implement RMI activation Jini services must be long-lived and resilient, and must efficiently manage their computational resources with little user intervention. This article shows how to use RMI activation to manage computational resources and increase the availability of Jini services...  |
JavaWorld April 2002 |
Letters to the Editor How does PreparedStatement perform? How do you compile Java code dynamically? Does ChainedException preserve the original exception? How do you combine a sorting Decorator with a filtering Decorator? JavaWorld authors answer these questions and more...  |
JavaWorld October 2001 Tony Loton |
JavaMail quick start This article shows the first steps on the road to building Java-based email applications. If you fancy building your own email client to replace Microsoft Outlook, or a Web-based email system to rival Hotmail, this is the place to start...  |
Linux Journal March 1, 2002 Cameron Laird |
XSLT Powers a New Wave of Web Applications Extensible Stylesheet Language for Transformations (XSLT) is a computing language specialized for mapping XML documents into other XML documents...  |
JavaWorld July 2002 Nelson Minar |
Test networked code the easy way Networked code proves difficult to test thoroughly because test suites work best as standalone processes unreliant on other servers. In this article, the author describes two techniques for unit testing network code.  |
JavaWorld October 2000 Michael Koch |
Leverage legacy systems with a blend of XML, XSL, and Java As e-commerce becomes a focal point for companies scrambling to have a presence on the electronic frontier, incorporating those new ventures into the existing infrastructure becomes crucial. A few creative applications using XML and Java can give you a good solution...  |
JavaWorld January 2002 Frank Sommers |
A birds-eye view of Web services The author defines Web services, explains how they operate, and compares them to related Java technologies. He also presents a general programming model for Web services, independent of any framework or technology...  |
JavaWorld December 2000 Michael C. Daconta |
When Runtime.exec() won't This installment of Java Traps discusses one new pitfall and revisits another from the previous column. Originating in the java.lang package, the pitfall specifically involves problems with the Runtime.exec() method.  |
JavaWorld February 2002 Dirk Reinshagen |
Connect the enterprise with the JCA, Part 2 This article demonstrates a simple JCA (J2EE Connector Architecture) adapter implementation. After you read this article, you'll possess a good understanding of how to build your own JCA adapter...  |
JavaWorld May 2000 Jason Briggs |
Dynamic user interface is only skin deep A skin is a collection of images and a definition file, which together describe an application interface. Here are ways to use skins to customize your applets...  |
JavaWorld October 2000 Robert Hustead |
Mapping XML to Java, Part 2 This article develops a SAX API-based class library that is easily extended to create XML-to-Java mapping code. First, we explore the important ideas that drive the need for the class library. Then we develop a basic approach for implementing the library as well as a few samples that demonstrate some more advanced topics on parsing XML with the SAX API...  |
JavaWorld December 2000 Frank Sommers |
Sun lets Jini Starter Kit 1.1 out of the bottle In this interview, Jini architect and Sun Microsystems Distinguished Engineer Jim Waldo discusses the Jini 1.1 release and Jini's role in enterprise systems, offers advice on introducing business-specific APIs into Jini, and gives insight into scaling Jini...  |
JavaWorld October 2002 Jeff Friesen |
Java's character and assorted string classes support text-processing Text-processing is one of the more frequent activities in which computer programs engage. Java supports that activity via the Character, String, StringBuffer, and StringTokenizer classes. This article explores each class and introduces you to an assortment of those classes' methods.  |
JavaWorld October 2000 Frank Sommers |
Activatable Jini services, Part 2: Patterns of use This article concentrates on the consequences of activation in the Jini context. Sommers exponds on the issue of deactivating objects, then considers the implications of deactivation for well-designed Jini services and how the Jini helper services introduced in the 1.1 beta version of the JSK can contribute...  |
JavaWorld December 2001 |
Java Product News (updated December 21, 2001) Borland introduces Web services toolkit... Innoopract launches W4 Toolkit... Java XML Pack now available... X-Hive releases upgraded XML database... Softera updates UML modeling tool... Thought Inc. adds Ant to CocoBase Saffeine protects code with JCE... XMetaL 3 now supports XML Schema... SpiritCache 1.2 now shipping... Flashline and TogetherSoft form partnership... Jcorporate updates eContent... etc.  |
JavaWorld January 4, 2002 |
Java Product News JavaOne registration opens... Alcea Technologies releases bug tracking system... Jini Starter Kit 1.2 now available... Zeosoft partners with SavaJe... FreeTTS turns text into speech... Borland introduces Web services toolkit... Innoopract launches W4 Toolkit... etc.  |
InternetNews June 25, 2004 Michael Singer |
James Gosling, Creator of Java The CTO of Sun's Developer Product Group discusses open sourcing Java, Tiger, NetBeans, JINI and the Brazilians.  |
JavaWorld August 2002 Frank Sommers |
Java's secret weapon Set in the backdrop of JiniFest 2002, the Jini community's first technology showcase, this article revisits the original Jini vision, surveys Jini's progress since the technology's introduction in 1998, and suggests the roles Jini might play in Java's future.  |
JavaWorld December 28, 2001 |
Java Product News Jini Starter Kit 1.2 now available... Zeosoft partners with SavaJe... FreeTTS turns text into speech... Borland introduces Web services toolkit... Innoopract launches W4 Toolkit... Java XML Pack now available... X-Hive releases upgraded XML database... etc.  |
JavaWorld January 11, 2002 |
Java Product News Data Representations introduces micro Java development tool... Quickstream and Drala Software combine products... JWorks develops embedded apps... JavaOne registration opens... Alcea Technologies releases bug tracking system... Jini Starter Kit 1.2 now available... etc.  |
JavaWorld May 2001 Jennifer Wilson |
Java Product News Zero G enhances its installation platform... ObjectFrontier launches first EJB 2.0-compliant persistence manager platform... eSpaces helps Java newbies develop complex projects... iBus//Mobile 2.0 simplifies wireless development... JCP plans update for Java Speech API... etc.  |
JavaWorld November 2000 Julie Salzmann |
Java Product News JBuilder Handheld Express speeds Java development for the Palm OS... Oracle XDK meets new XML specs... Sun releases Jini Technology Starter Kit... Bull debuts SIM ROCK 64... Artistic Systems unveils JCanvas Studio... and more...  |
JavaWorld November 2001 Sommers & Venners |
Jini-talk with Jim Waldo In this interview with Jini architect Jim Waldo, Waldo talks about the impact of mobility on distributed systems, Jini as a tool to reengineer the corporate MIS infrastructure, the importance of type systems, and the semantic Web.  |
Unix Insider November 2000 Cameron Laird & Kathryn Soraiz |
Specialty scripting languages In this week's Regular Expressions, Cameron Laird and Kathryn Soraiz outline four small, but growing, scripting languages...  |
JavaWorld August 2002 Frank Sommers |
Jini's relevance emerges, Part 1 Sun Chief Engineer Rob Gingell discusses the role of Jini in Sun's new software organization; the relationship between Jini, Web services, and the Sun ONE initiative; and the rationale for document-centered Web services versus mobile object systems.  |