This fourth edition of the definitive reference to JavaScript, a scripting language that can be embedded directly in web pages, covers the latest version of the language, JavaScript 1.5, as supported by Netscape 6 and Internet Explorer 6. The book also provides complete coverage of the W3C DOM standard (Level 1 and Level 2), while retaining material on the legacy Level 0 DOM for backward compatibility
JavaServer Pages™ Specification
This document is intended for:
· Web Server and Application Server vendors that want to provide JSP containers that
conform to the Tag Extensions specification.
· Web Authoring Tool vendors that want to generate JSP pages that conform to the Tag
Extensions specification.
· Service providers that want to deliver functionality as tag libraries.
· Sophisticated JSP page authors that want to define new tag libraries for their use, or who
are responsible for creating tag libraries for the use of a group.
· Eager JSP page authors who do not want to or cannot wait for Web Authoring Tools, or
even a User’s Guide.
This document is not a User’s Guide, but it contains some positioning and explanatory
material.
PHP Cookbook has a wealth of solutions for problems that you ll face regularly. With topics that range from beginner questions to advanced web programming techniques, this guide contains practical examples -- or "recipes" -- for anyone who uses this scripting language to generate dynamic web content. Updated for PHP 5, this book provides solutions that explain how to use the new language features in detail, including the vastly improved object-oriented capabilities and the new PDO data access extension. New sections on classes and objects are included, along with new material on processing XML, building web services with PHP, and working with SOAP/REST architectures. With each recipe, the authors include a discussion that explains the logic and concepts underlying the solution.
Jvm 規(guī)范說(shuō)明。The Java Virtual Machine was designed to support the Java programming language. Some concepts and vocabulary from the Java language are thus necessary to understand the virtual machine. This chapter gives enough of an overview of Java to support the discussion of the Java Virtual Machine to follow. Its material has been condensed from The Java Language Specification, by James Gosling, Bill Joy, and Guy Steele. For a complete discussion of the Java language, or for details and examples of the material in this chapter, refer to that book. Readers familiar with that book may wish to skip this chapter. Readers familiar with Java, but not with The Java Language Specification, should at least skim this chapter for the terminology it introduces.
Quality control of production has always been a necessity
in stainless steel mills. The users of stainless
steel set ever-increasing requirements on product
quality. Many material properties can still only be
measured in laboratory but more and more measurements
are now made on-line during the production.
Especially surface defects have to be detected on-line
with a surface inspection system because of their random
appearance.
MS Access is commonly thought of as the little brother of Database engines, and not a lot of material has
been published about methods used for exploiting it during a penetration test. The aim of this paper is to
bring a lot of disparate information together into one guide.
游戲開(kāi)發(fā)數(shù)據(jù)結(jié)構(gòu)Data Structures for Game Programmers
The Goodies Directory contains all sorts of stuff. For example, there are the four
3rd-Party libraries used in the book, SDL, SDL_TTF, FreeType (which SDL_TTF uses),
and STLPort, which is one implementation of the Standard Template Library.
Also, there are four articles on trees and SDL in the articles directory. These
supplement the material in the book.
It was proposed that perfect invisibility cloaks can be constructed for hiding objects from electromagnetic
illumination (Pendry et al., Science 312, p. 1780). The cylindrical cloaks experimentally
demonstrated (Schurig et al., Science 314, p. 997) and theoretically proposed (Cai et al., Nat. Photon.
1, p. 224) have however simplified material parameters in order to facilitate easier realization
as well as to avoid infinities in optical constants. Here we show that the cylindrical cloaks with
simplified material parameters inherently allow the zeroth-order cylindrical wave to pass through
the cloak as if the cloak is made of a homogeneous isotropic medium, and thus visible. To all
high-order cylindrical waves, our numerical simulation suggests that the simplified cloak inherits
some properties of the ideal cloak, but finite scatterings exist.