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  1. Proceedings of the conference on APL '99 : On track to the 21st century (APL '99)
  2. Choices in server-side programming: a comparative programming exercise
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Generalization of Pick's theorem for surface of polyhedra
When bears are blue and bulls are red
Dynamic systems simulation using APL2
Functions and data can dance as equal partners
The Zark library of utility functions
Choices in server-side programming: a comparative programming exercise
Regions: an abstraction for expressing array computation
Accelerating APL programs with SAC
Sparse arrays in J
INFO: interactive APL documentation
A retro/prospective on APL Graphpak
Teaching J as a computer notation for secondary mathematics
An object-oriented approach to educational software in building physics
APL-generated teaching and testing items to enhance a student's ability to discover functional relationships
GFSR pseudorandom number generation using APL

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Choices in server-side programming: a comparative programming exercise

Content Provider ACM Digital Library
Author Brown, Robert G. Hahn, Willi
Abstract One of the fastest growing and changing fields for software developers is in writing applications that are used across the "World Wide Web", which is in turn a client-server system that runs on the Internet. Servers, known by name, can be accessed over the Internet, and a protocol, known as HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) is used to send requests to servers for text, images (still and moving), audio, and other information. A very large amount of business will be conducted this way, now and in the future, having grown from almost nothing only 5 years ago. Application development on the Web is largely a matter of writing programs that are executed by the server, and we're going to focus our attention on two programming and operating environments that can be used to deliver server-side software.We would like to show how APL can be used to develop programs that run on the server, and we will contrast it with another means of developing and delivering server-side programs. It is not our goal to deliver any judgment about whether or not one system is "better" than the other (we believe that any such statement would be simplistic to the point of being misleading); we intend only to share the results of our experience, help the reader understand what technologies that are available, and assist in making an informed choice if participation in a project of this nature is part of what the reader does.
Starting Page 35
Ending Page 40
Page Count 6
File Format PDF
ISBN 1581131267
DOI 10.1145/312627.312710
Language English
Publisher Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Publisher Date 1999-08-01
Publisher Place New York
Access Restriction Subscribed
Content Type Text
Resource Type Article
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