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  2. JHTML - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JHTML

    The JHTML page is compiled first into a .java file and then into a Java .class file. The application server runs the code in the .class file as a servlet whose sole function is to emit a stream of standard HTTP and HTML data back to the HTTP server and on back to the client software (the web browser, usually) that originally requested the ...

  3. Javadoc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Javadoc

    Based on information in Java source code, Javadoc generates documentation formatted as HTML and via extensions, other formats. [1] Javadoc was created by Sun Microsystems and is owned by Oracle today. The content and formatting of a resulting document are controlled via special markup in source code comments.

  4. OmniFaces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OmniFaces

    Omnifaces was created in response to seeing the same questions and the same example and utility code posted over and over again. [1] It simply comes as an answer to day-by-day problems encountered during working with JSF (e.g. bug fixing, pitfalls, missing features, missing utilities, common questions, etc.).

  5. Jakarta Server Pages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_Server_Pages

    JSP allows Java code and certain predefined actions to be interleaved with static web markup content, such as HTML. The resulting page is compiled and executed on the server to deliver a document. The compiled pages, as well as any dependent Java libraries, contain Java bytecode rather than machine code .

  6. File URI scheme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_URI_scheme

    Both forms are actively used. Microsoft .NET (for example, the method new Uri(path)) generally uses the 2-slash form; Java (for example, the method new URI(path)) generally uses the 4-slash form. Either form allows the most common operations on URIs (resolving relative URIs, and dereferencing to obtain a connection to the remote file) to be ...

  7. Here document - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Here_document

    In computing, a here document (here-document, here-text, heredoc, hereis, here-string or here-script) is a file literal or input stream literal: it is a section of a source code file that is treated as if it were a separate file.

  8. data URI scheme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_URI_scheme

    The media type part may include one or more parameters, in the format attribute=value, separated by semicolons (;) . A common media type parameter is charset, specifying the character set of the media type, where the value is from the IANA list of character set names. [6]

  9. Simple API for XML - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_API_for_XML

    The event-driven model of SAX is useful for XML parsing, but it does have certain drawbacks. Virtually any kind of XML validation requires access to the document in full. . The most trivial example is that an attribute declared in the DTD to be of type IDREF, requires that there be only one element in the document that uses the same value for an ID attribu