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 | 3447 |
| Downloads | 0 |
| Price: |
Buy Now
|
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.
NUR 229:BACTERIAL MENINGITIS
Trending!
Bacterial meningitis is a severe infection
characterized by inflammation of the membranes that envelop the brain and spinal cord. It is caused by specific bacteria, including Streptococcus pneumonia, Neisseria meningitidis, and Haemophilus
influenzae type B
161 Pages
2924 Views
0 Downloads
6.6 MB
GENDER AND SEXUAL REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH
Trending!
The socially constructed roles and responsibilities assigned to women and men by society.
These roles are learned, vary across cultures and change over time.
Gender is dynamic, geographical, learned and
socially constructed.
45 Pages
3211 Views
0 Downloads
483.93 KB
GIT Drugs
Trending!
Ulceration and erosion of the lining of
the upper portion of the GIT are common
problems that manifest as Gastro
Esophageal Reflux Disease, gastric and
duodenal peptic ulcers, and stress related mucosal injury
45 Pages
3458 Views
0 Downloads
876.08 KB
DISORDERS OF PENIS, URETHRA
Trending!
Priapism is a prolonged and painful erection of the penis lasting more than four hours and occurring without sexual stimulation. It is a urological emergency because it can lead to
permanent erectile dysfunction if not treated
promptly
95 Pages
3330 Views
0 Downloads
1.02 MB
Adolescent and Youth Reproductive Health
Trending!
Adolescent refers to any person between ages 10 and 19. Youth: The stage between 15 and 24 years, during which young people continue to develop and establish their identities, responsibilities, and social roles. Reproductive Health: A state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being in all matters relating to the reproductive system, including the ability to have a responsible, satisfying, and safe sex life, the capability to reproduce, and the freedom to decide if, when, and how often to do so.
52 Pages
3089 Views
0 Downloads
26.06 MB
Theories and Concepts of Growth and Development
Trending!
Growth: An increase in body size (Ht/Wt)
Development: An increasing capacity to function at more advanced levels. An increase in function and complexity that occurs through growth, maturation and learning( an increase in capabilities). Maturation involves physical change in the complexity of body structures that enables a child to function at increasingly higher levels; Learning is a relatively permanent change in behavior due to maturation and experience with the environment
33 Pages
3356 Views
0 Downloads
789.69 KB
HEALTH ASSESSMENT
Examining the male patient:
• Before examining the reproductive system of a male patient, perform hand hygiene and put on gloves.
• Make the patient as comfortable as possible, and explain what you’re doing every step of the way.
• This helps the patient feel less embarrassed
30 Pages
573 Views
0 Downloads
558 KB
Hematinic
Trending!
RBCs are produced in the bone marrow by
erythropoiesis, which is controlled by the
glycoprotein erythropoietin, produced in the
kidneys. The bone marrow uses iron, amino acids, carbohydrates, folic acid, and vitamin B12 to produce healthy, efficient RBCs.
25 Pages
3400 Views
0 Downloads
737.83 KB
INTRODUCTION TO MIDWIFERY AND WOMEN'S HEALTH.
Trending!
The seeds of midwifery were slow to grow, but they proved to be persistent. Midwife is derived from middle English ‘mitwif’ -‘with
woman’. Formal education was not done for midwives but they were women who had experiences on childbirth. Technical and magical aspects of midwifery existed in ancient times15th and 16th century, midwives were burnt due to people’s perception of them being companions of the
devil
38 Pages
3470 Views
1 Downloads
2.43 MB
PEDIATRIC HISTORY TAKING AND PHYSICAL ASSESSMENT
Trending!
Chief Complaint
A. Brief statement of primary problem (including duration) that caused family to seek medical attention
B. OLDCART ACRONYM
II. History of Present Illness
A. Initial statement identifying the historian, that person’s relationship to patient and their reliability
B. Age, sex, race, and other important identifying information about patient
C. Concise chronological account of the illness, including any previous treatment with full description of symptoms It belongs here if it is relates to the differential diagnosis for the chief complaint.
23 Pages
3246 Views
0 Downloads
541.05 KB