enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Swing (Java) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swing_(Java)

    Example Swing widgets in Java. Swing is a GUI widget toolkit for Java. [1] It is part of Oracle's Java Foundation Classes (JFC) – an API for providing a graphical user interface (GUI) for Java programs. Swing was developed to provide a more sophisticated set of GUI components than the earlier Abstract Window Toolkit (AWT).

  3. Facade pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facade_pattern

    In this UML class diagram, the Client class doesn't access the subsystem classes directly. Instead, the Client works through a Facade class that implements a simple interface in terms of (by delegating to) the subsystem classes (Class1, Class2, and Class3). The Client depends only on the simple Facade interface and is independent of the complex ...

  4. Abstract Window Toolkit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abstract_Window_Toolkit

    The Abstract Window Toolkit (AWT) is Java's original platform-dependent windowing, graphics, and user-interface widget toolkit, preceding Swing. The AWT is part of the Java Foundation Classes (JFC) — the standard API for providing a graphical user interface (GUI) for a Java program. AWT is also the GUI toolkit for a number of Java ME profiles.

  5. Dependency injection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dependency_injection

    In turn, a client is any class which uses services. The services that a client requires are the client's dependencies. Any object can be a service or a client; the names relate only to the role the objects play in an injection. The same object may even be both a client (it uses injected services) and a service (it is injected into other objects).

  6. Class (computer programming) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Class_(computer_programming)

    For example, the Java language does not allow client code that accesses the private data of a class to compile. [12] In the C++ language, private methods are visible, but not accessible in the interface; however, they may be made invisible by explicitly declaring fully abstract classes that represent the interfaces of the class.

  7. Jakarta Servlet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_Servlet

    A Jakarta Servlet is a Java class [1] in Jakarta EE that conforms to the Jakarta Servlet API, [2] a standard for implementing Java classes that respond to requests. Servlets could in principle communicate over any client–server protocol, but they are most often used with HTTP.

  8. Proxy pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proxy_pattern

    In computer programming, the proxy pattern is a software design pattern.A proxy, in its most general form, is a class functioning as an interface to something else.The proxy could interface to anything: a network connection, a large object in memory, a file, or some other resource that is expensive or impossible to duplicate.

  9. Jakarta Enterprise Beans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_Enterprise_Beans

    Additionally, web service based communication can be used by Java clients to circumvent the arcane and ill-defined requirements for the so-called "client-libraries"; a set of jar files that a Java client must have on its class-path in order to communicate with the remote EJB server.