Web Application Basics
| Institution | University |
| Course | BACHELOR OF COMPUTER... |
| Year | 1st Year |
| Semester | Unknown |
| Posted By | stephen oyake rabilo |
| File Type | |
| Pages | 98 Pages |
| File Size | 1.17 MB |
| Views | 1873 |
| Downloads | 0 |
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Description
Web applications evolved from Web sites or Web systems. The first Web sites, created
by Tim Berners-Lee while at CERN (the European Laboratory for Particle Physics),
formed a distributed hypermedia system that enabled researchers to have access to
documents and information published by fellow researchers, directly from their computers. Documents were accessed and viewed with a piece of software called a
browser, a software application that runs on a client computer. With a browser, the user
can request documents from other computers on the network and render those documents
on the user’s display. To view a document, the user must start the browser and enter
the name of the document and the name of the host computer where it can be found.
The browser sends a request for the document to the host computer. The request is
handled by a software application called a Web server, an application usually run as a
service, or daemon, that monitors network activity on a special port, usually port 80.
The browser sends a specially formatted request for a document (Web page) to the
Web server through this network port. The Web server receives the request, locates the
document on its local file system, and sends it back to the browser; see Figure 2-1.
This Web system is a hypermedia system because the resources in the system are
linked to one another. The term Web comes from looking at the system as a set of
nodes with interconnecting links. From one viewpoint, it looks like a spider’s web.
The links provide a means to navigate the resources of the system. Most of the links
connect textual documents, but the system can be used to distribute audio, video, and
custom data as well. Links make navigation to other documents easy. The user simply
clicks a link in the document, and the browser interprets that as a request to load the
referenced document or resource in its place.
Below is the document preview.
Antianginal drugs and anticoagulants
CAD involves changes in the coronary vessels that promote atheromas, which narrow the coronary arteries and decrease their elasticity and responsiveness to normal stimuli.
• Angina pectoris occurs when the narrowed vessels cannot accommodate the myocardial demand for oxygen.
• When a coronary vessel is completely occluded, the cells that depend on that vessel for oxygen become ischemic, then necrotic, and die (MI).
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Antiseptics and Disinfectants
Antiseptics and disinfectants are locally acting
antimicrobial drugs. These agents are used to reduce acquisition and transmission of infection. Drugs suitable for antisepsis and disinfection cannot be used internally because of toxicity. As a rule, agents used as disinfectants are too harsh for application to living tissue
35 Pages
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ANTI-TUBERCULAR AGENTS
here are 4 primary drugs (first-line) used in the treatment
(RIFAFOUR)
Rifampicin (R)
Isoniazid (H)
Pyrazinamide (Z)
Ethambutol (E)
17 Pages
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ANTITHYROID DRUGS
Antithyroid drugs are drugs used to lower the functional capacity of hyperactive thyroid glands, they are hormone antagonists actions upon thyroid hormones.
16 Pages
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BASIC CONCEPTS IN MEDICAL SURGICAL NURSING PRACTICE
The health care industry, in the world, Kenya included has experienced profound changes during the past several decades. Nursing, as a health care profession and a major component of the health care delivery system, is significantly affected by shifts in the health care industry. In addition, nursing has been and will continue to be an important force in shaping the future of the health care system.
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Beta lactam antibiotics
Penicillins
• Penicillin was the first antibiotic introduced for clinical use.
• Sir Alexander Fleming used Penicillium molds to produce the original penicillin in the 1920s
• Penicillins include: penicillinase-resistant penicillins:-Oxacillin, dicloxacillin, and nafcillin which are naturally resistant to certain beta-lactamases.
38 Pages
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Cardiovascular system
If the coronary blood supply is not sufficient to meet the needs of the heart, the result may be ischemia, injury or an infarction (necrosis) of the heart muscle itself.
• tHe left main coronary artery branches into;
•left circumflex coronary artery
•left anterior descending (LAD) coronary
artery.
• The right coronary artery (RCA) supplies nutrients and oxygen to the right atrium, the right ventricle and the inferior wall of the left ve
68 Pages
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CHANGES DURING PREGNANCY
A mother should be ready in all aspects:
physically, mentally, socially, economically.
Genetic testing and counselling
Proper nutrition
Treatment of existing diseases and conditions
Prevention of unwanted pregnancies
Consideration for extreme ages
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FUNDAMENTALS OF NURSING
• A nurse who wishes to be an effective caregiver must first learn how to communicate effectively.
• Good communication skills enable nurses to get to know their patients,
take history, diagnose, plan and meet their needs for nursing care.
• To adequately document the patient’s health history, communication techniques are important.
• Communication skills are therefore the building blocks of professional relationships between nurse and client, and the nurse and co- workers.
• Good skills help in exchange of ideas to facilitate problem solving.
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Principles of pharmacology
Pharmacology is the study of the biological effects of chemicals.
• Pharmacognosy- is the study of medicines or crude drugs produced from natural sources such as plants, microbes, and animals
• After a drug is administered, it is called a medication.
• Drugs- A drug is a chemical agent capable of producing biologic responses within the body.
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