-
What are Encapsulation,
Inheritance and Polymorphism?-
Encapsulation is the mechanism that
binds together code and data it
manipulates and keeps both safe from
outside interference and misuse.
Inheritance is the process by which
one object acquires the properties
of another object. Polymorphism is
the feature that allows one
interface to be used for general
class actions.
-
What is the difference between
Assignment and Initialization?-
Assignment can be done as many times
as desired whereas initialization
can be done only once.
-
What is OOPs?- Object
oriented programming organizes a
program around its data, i. e. ,
objects and a set of well defined
interfaces to that data. An
object-oriented program can be
characterized as data controlling
access to code.
-
What are Class, Constructor and
Primitive data types?- Class is
a template for multiple objects with
similar features and it is a blue
print for objects. It defines a type
of object according to the data the
object can hold and the operations
the object can perform. Constructor
is a special kind of method that
determines how an object is
initialized when created. Primitive
data types are 8 types and they are:
byte, short, int, long, float,
double, boolean, char.
-
What is an Object and how do you
allocate memory to it?- Object
is an instance of a class and it is
a software unit that combines a
structured set of data with a set of
operations for inspecting and
manipulating that data. When an
object is created using new
operator, memory is allocated to it.
-
What is the difference between
constructor and method?-
Constructor will be automatically
invoked when an object is created
whereas method has to be called
explicitly.
-
What are methods and how are they
defined?- Methods are functions
that operate on instances of classes
in which they are defined. Objects
can communicate with each other
using methods and can call methods
in other classes. Method definition
has four parts. They are name of the
method, type of object or primitive
type the method returns, a list of
parameters and the body of the
method. A method’s signature is a
combination of the first three parts
mentioned above.
-
What is the use of bin and lib in
JDK?- Bin contains all tools
such as javac, appletviewer, awt
tool, etc., whereas lib contains API
and all packages.
-
What is casting?- Casting is
used to convert the value of one
type to another.
-
How many ways can an argument be
passed to a subroutine and explain
them?- An argument can be passed
in two ways. They are passing by
value and passing by reference.
Passing by value: This method copies
the value of an argument into the
formal parameter of the subroutine.
Passing by reference: In this
method, a reference to an argument
(not the value of the argument) is
passed to the parameter.
-
What is the difference between an
argument and a parameter?- While
defining method, variables passed in
the method are called parameters.
While using those methods, values
passed to those variables are called
arguments.
-
What are different types of
access modifiers?- public: Any
thing declared as public can be
accessed from anywhere. private: Any
thing declared as private can’t be
seen outside of its class.
protected: Any thing declared as
protected can be accessed by classes
in the same package and subclasses
in the other packages. default
modifier : Can be accessed only to
classes in the same package.
-
What is final, finalize() and
finally?- final : final keyword
can be used for class, method and
variables. A final class cannot be
subclassed and it prevents other
programmers from subclassing a
secure class to invoke insecure
methods. A final method can’t be
overridden. A final variable can’t
change from its initialized value.
finalize() : finalize() method is
used just before an object is
destroyed and can be called just
prior to garbage collection. finally
: finally, a key word used in
exception handling, creates a block
of code that will be executed after
a try/catch block has completed and
before the code following the
try/catch block. The finally block
will execute whether or not an
exception is thrown. For example, if
a method opens a file upon exit,
then you will not want the code that
closes the file to be bypassed by
the exception-handling mechanism.
This finally keyword is designed to
address this contingency.
-
What is UNICODE?- Unicode is
used for internal representation of
characters and strings and it uses
16 bits to represent each other.
-
What is Garbage Collection and
how to call it explicitly?- When
an object is no longer referred to
by any variable, java automatically
reclaims memory used by that object.
This is known as garbage collection.
System. gc() method may be used to
call it explicitly.
-
What is finalize() method?-
finalize () method is used just
before an object is destroyed and
can be called just prior to garbage
collection.
-
What are Transient and Volatile
Modifiers?- Transient: The
transient modifier applies to
variables only and it is not stored
as part of its object’s Persistent
state. Transient variables are not
serialized. Volatile: Volatile
modifier applies to variables only
and it tells the compiler that the
variable modified by volatile can be
changed unexpectedly by other parts
of the program.
-
What is method overloading and
method overriding?- Method
overloading: When a method in a
class having the same method name
with different arguments is said to
be method overloading. Method
overriding : When a method in a
class having the same method name
with same arguments is said to be
method overriding.
-
What is difference between
overloading and overriding?- a)
In overloading, there is a
relationship between methods
available in the same class whereas
in overriding, there is relationship
between a superclass method and
subclass method. b) Overloading does
not block inheritance from the
superclass whereas overriding blocks
inheritance from the superclass. c)
In overloading, separate methods
share the same name whereas in
overriding, subclass method replaces
the superclass. d) Overloading must
have different method signatures
whereas overriding must have same
signature.
-
What is meant by Inheritance and
what are its advantages?-
Inheritance is the process of
inheriting all the features from a
class. The advantages of inheritance
are reusability of code and
accessibility of variables and
methods of the super class by
subclasses.
-
What is the difference between
this() and super()?- this() can
be used to invoke a constructor of
the same class whereas super() can
be used to invoke a super class
constructor.
-
What is the difference between
superclass and subclass?- A
super class is a class that is
inherited whereas sub class is a
class that does the inheriting.
-
What modifiers may be used with
top-level class?- public,
abstract and final can be used for
top-level class.
-
What are inner class and
anonymous class?- Inner class :
classes defined in other classes,
including those defined in methods
are called inner classes. An inner
class can have any accessibility
including private. Anonymous class :
Anonymous class is a class defined
inside a method without a name and
is instantiated and declared in the
same place and cannot have explicit
constructors.
-
What is a package?- A package
is a collection of classes and
interfaces that provides a
high-level layer of access
protection and name space
management.
-
What is a reflection package?-
java. lang. reflect package has the
ability to analyze itself in
runtime.
-
What is interface and its use?-
Interface is similar to a class
which may contain method’s signature
only but not bodies and it is a
formal set of method and constant
declarations that must be defined by
the class that implements it.
Interfaces are useful for:
a)Declaring methods that one or more
classes are expected to implement
b)Capturing similarities between
unrelated classes without forcing a
class relationship. c)Determining an
object’s programming interface
without revealing the actual body of
the class.
-
What is an abstract class?-
An abstract class is a class
designed with implementation gaps
for subclasses to fill in and is
deliberately incomplete.
-
What is the difference between
Integer and int?- a) Integer is
a class defined in the java. lang
package, whereas int is a primitive
data type defined in the Java
language itself. Java does not
automatically convert from one to
the other. b) Integer can be used as
an argument for a method that
requires an object, whereas int can
be used for calculations.
-
What is a cloneable interface and
how many methods does it contain?-
It is not having any method because
it is a TAGGED or MARKER interface.
-
What is the difference between
abstract class and interface?-
a) All the methods declared inside
an interface are abstract whereas
abstract class must have at least
one abstract method and others may
be concrete or abstract. b) In
abstract class, key word abstract
must be used for the methods whereas
interface we need not use that
keyword for the methods. c) Abstract
class must have subclasses whereas
interface can’t have subclasses.
-
Can you have an inner class
inside a method and what variables
can you access?- Yes, we can
have an inner class inside a method
and final variables can be accessed.
-
What is the difference between
String and String Buffer?- a)
String objects are constants and
immutable whereas StringBuffer
objects are not. b) String class
supports constant strings whereas
StringBuffer class supports growable
and modifiable strings.
-
What is the difference between
Array and vector?- Array is a
set of related data type and static
whereas vector is a growable array
of objects and dynamic.
-
What is the difference between
exception and error?- The
exception class defines mild error
conditions that your program
encounters. Exceptions can occur
when trying to open the file, which
does not exist, the network
connection is disrupted, operands
being manipulated are out of
prescribed ranges, the class file
you are interested in loading is
missing. The error class defines
serious error conditions that you
should not attempt to recover from.
In most cases it is advisable to let
the program terminate when such an
error is encountered.
-
What is the difference between
process and thread?- Process is
a program in execution whereas
thread is a separate path of
execution in a program.
-
What is multithreading and what
are the methods for inter-thread
communication and what is the class
in which these methods are defined?-
Multithreading is the mechanism in
which more than one thread run
independent of each other within the
process. wait (), notify () and
notifyAll() methods can be used for
inter-thread communication and these
methods are in Object class. wait()
: When a thread executes a call to
wait() method, it surrenders the
object lock and enters into a
waiting state. notify() or notifyAll()
: To remove a thread from the
waiting state, some other thread
must make a call to notify() or
notifyAll() method on the same
object.
-
What is the class and interface
in java to create thread and which
is the most advantageous method?-
Thread class and Runnable interface
can be used to create threads and
using Runnable interface is the most
advantageous method to create
threads because we need not extend
thread class here.
-
What are the states associated in
the thread?- Thread contains
ready, running, waiting and dead
states.
-
What is synchronization?-
Synchronization is the mechanism
that ensures that only one thread is
accessed the resources at a time.
-
When you will synchronize a piece
of your code?- When you expect
your code will be accessed by
different threads and these threads
may change a particular data causing
data corruption.
-
What is deadlock?- When two
threads are waiting each other and
can’t precede the program is said to
be deadlock.
-
What is daemon thread and which
method is used to create the daemon
thread?- Daemon thread is a low
priority thread which runs
intermittently in the back ground
doing the garbage collection
operation for the java runtime
system. setDaemon method is used to
create a daemon thread.
-
Are there any global variables in
Java, which can be accessed by other
part of your program?- No, it is
not the main method in which you
define variables. Global variables
is not possible because concept of
encapsulation is eliminated here.
-
What is an applet?- Applet is
a dynamic and interactive program
that runs inside a web page
displayed by a java capable browser.
-
What is the difference between
applications and applets?-
a)Application must be run on local
machine whereas applet needs no
explicit installation on local
machine. b)Application must be run
explicitly within a java-compatible
virtual machine whereas applet loads
and runs itself automatically in a
java-enabled browser. d)Application
starts execution with its main
method whereas applet starts
execution with its init method.
e)Application can run with or
without graphical user interface
whereas applet must run within a
graphical user interface.
-
How does applet recognize the
height and width?- Using
getParameters() method.
-
When do you use codebase in
applet?- When the applet class
file is not in the same directory,
codebase is used.
-
What is the lifecycle of an
applet?- init() method - Can be
called when an applet is first
loaded start() method - Can be
called each time an applet is
started. paint() method - Can be
called when the applet is minimized
or maximized. stop() method - Can be
used when the browser moves off the
applet’s page. destroy() method -
Can be called when the browser is
finished with the applet.
-
How do you set security in
applets?- using
setSecurityManager() method
-
What is an event and what are the
models available for event handling?-
An event is an event object that
describes a state of change in a
source. In other words, event occurs
when an action is generated, like
pressing button, clicking mouse,
selecting a list, etc. There are two
types of models for handling events
and they are: a) event-inheritance
model and b) event-delegation model
-
What are the advantages of the
model over the event-inheritance
model?- The event-delegation
model has two advantages over the
event-inheritance model. They are:
a)It enables event handling by
objects other than the ones that
generate the events. This allows a
clean separation between a
component’s design and its use. b)It
performs much better in applications
where many events are generated.
This performance improvement is due
to the fact that the
event-delegation model does not have
to be repeatedly process unhandled
events as is the case of the
event-inheritance.
-
What is source and listener?-
source : A source is an object that
generates an event. This occurs when
the internal state of that object
changes in some way. listener : A
listener is an object that is
notified when an event occurs. It
has two major requirements. First,
it must have been registered with
one or more sources to receive
notifications about specific types
of events. Second, it must implement
methods to receive and process these
notifications.
-
What is adapter class?- An
adapter class provides an empty
implementation of all methods in an
event listener interface. Adapter
classes are useful when you want to
receive and process only some of the
events that are handled by a
particular event listener interface.
You can define a new class to act
listener by extending one of the
adapter classes and implementing
only those events in which you are
interested. For example, the
MouseMotionAdapter class has two
methods, mouseDragged()and
mouseMoved(). The signatures of
these empty are exactly as defined
in the MouseMotionListener
interface. If you are interested in
only mouse drag events, then you
could simply extend
MouseMotionAdapter and implement
mouseDragged() .
-
What is meant by controls and
what are different types of controls
in AWT?- Controls are components
that allow a user to interact with
your application and the AWT
supports the following types of
controls: Labels, Push Buttons,
Check Boxes, Choice Lists, Lists,
Scrollbars, Text Components. These
controls are subclasses of
Component.
-
What is the difference between
choice and list?- A Choice is
displayed in a compact form that
requires you to pull it down to see
the list of available choices and
only one item may be selected from a
choice. A List may be displayed in
such a way that several list items
are visible and it supports the
selection of one or more list items.
-
What is the difference between
scrollbar and scrollpane?- A
Scrollbar is a Component, but not a
Container whereas Scrollpane is a
Conatiner and handles its own events
and perform its own scrolling.
-
What is a layout manager and what
are different types of layout
managers available in java AWT?-
A layout manager is an object that
is used to organize components in a
container. The different layouts are
available are FlowLayout,
BorderLayout, CardLayout, GridLayout
and GridBagLayout.
-
How are the elements of different
layouts organized?- FlowLayout:
The elements of a FlowLayout are
organized in a top to bottom, left
to right fashion. BorderLayout: The
elements of a BorderLayout are
organized at the borders (North,
South, East and West) and the center
of a container. CardLayout: The
elements of a CardLayout are
stacked, on top of the other, like a
deck of cards. GridLayout: The
elements of a GridLayout are of
equal size and are laid out using
the square of a grid. GridBagLayout:
The elements of a GridBagLayout are
organized according to a grid.
However, the elements are of
different size and may occupy more
than one row or column of the grid.
In addition, the rows and columns
may have different sizes.
-
Which containers use a Border
layout as their default layout?-
Window, Frame and Dialog classes use
a BorderLayout as their layout.
-
Which containers use a Flow
layout as their default layout?-
Panel and Applet classes use the
FlowLayout as their default layout.
-
What are wrapper classes?-
Wrapper classes are classes that
allow primitive types to be accessed
as objects.
-
What are Vector, Hashtable,
LinkedList and Enumeration?-
Vector : The Vector class provides
the capability to implement a
growable array of objects. Hashtable
: The Hashtable class implements a
Hashtable data structure. A
Hashtable indexes and stores objects
in a dictionary using hash codes as
the object’s keys. Hash codes are
integer values that identify
objects. LinkedList: Removing or
inserting elements in the middle of
an array can be done using
LinkedList. A LinkedList stores each
object in a separate link whereas an
array stores object references in
consecutive locations. Enumeration:
An object that implements the
Enumeration interface generates a
series of elements, one at a time.
It has two methods, namely
hasMoreElements() and nextElement().
HasMoreElemnts() tests if this
enumeration has more elements and
nextElement method returns
successive elements of the series.
-
What is the difference between
set and list?- Set stores
elements in an unordered way but
does not contain duplicate elements,
whereas list stores elements in an
ordered way but may contain
duplicate elements.
-
What is a stream and what are the
types of Streams and classes of the
Streams?- A Stream is an
abstraction that either produces or
consumes information. There are two
types of Streams and they are: Byte
Streams: Provide a convenient means
for handling input and output of
bytes. Character Streams: Provide a
convenient means for handling input
& output of characters. Byte Streams
classes: Are defined by using two
abstract classes, namely InputStream
and OutputStream. Character Streams
classes: Are defined by using two
abstract classes, namely Reader and
Writer.
-
What is the difference between
Reader/Writer and InputStream/Output
Stream?- The Reader/Writer class
is character-oriented and the
InputStream/OutputStream class is
byte-oriented.
-
What is an I/O filter?- An
I/O filter is an object that reads
from one stream and writes to
another, usually altering the data
in some way as it is passed from one
stream to another.
-
What is serialization and
deserialization?- Serialization
is the process of writing the state
of an object to a byte stream.
Deserialization is the process of
restoring these objects.
-
What is JDBC?- JDBC is a set
of Java API for executing SQL
statements. This API consists of a
set of classes and interfaces to
enable programs to write pure Java
Database applications.
-
What are drivers available?-
a) JDBC-ODBC Bridge driver b) Native
API Partly-Java driver c) JDBC-Net
Pure Java driver d) Native-Protocol
Pure Java driver
-
What is the difference between
JDBC and ODBC?- a) OBDC is for
Microsoft and JDBC is for Java
applications. b) ODBC can’t be
directly used with Java because it
uses a C interface. c) ODBC makes
use of pointers which have been
removed totally from Java. d) ODBC
mixes simple and advanced features
together and has complex options for
simple queries. But JDBC is designed
to keep things simple while allowing
advanced capabilities when required.
e) ODBC requires manual installation
of the ODBC driver manager and
driver on all client machines. JDBC
drivers are written in Java and JDBC
code is automatically installable,
secure, and portable on all
platforms. f) JDBC API is a natural
Java interface and is built on ODBC.
JDBC retains some of the basic
features of ODBC.
-
What are the types of JDBC Driver
Models and explain them?- There
are two types of JDBC Driver Models
and they are: a) Two tier model and
b) Three tier model Two tier model:
In this model, Java applications
interact directly with the database.
A JDBC driver is required to
communicate with the particular
database management system that is
being accessed. SQL statements are
sent to the database and the results
are given to user. This model is
referred to as client/server
configuration where user is the
client and the machine that has the
database is called as the server.
Three tier model: A middle tier is
introduced in this model. The
functions of this model are: a)
Collection of SQL statements from
the client and handing it over to
the database, b) Receiving results
from database to the client and c)
Maintaining control over accessing
and updating of the above.
-
What are the steps involved for
making a connection with a database
or how do you connect to a database?a)
Loading the driver : To load the
driver, Class. forName() method is
used. Class. forName(”sun. jdbc.
odbc. JdbcOdbcDriver”); When the
driver is loaded, it registers
itself with the java. sql.
DriverManager class as an available
database driver. b) Making a
connection with database: To open a
connection to a given database,
DriverManager. getConnection()
method is used. Connection con =
DriverManager. getConnection (”jdbc:odbc:somedb”,
“user”, “password”); c) Executing
SQL statements : To execute a SQL
query, java. sql. statements class
is used. createStatement() method of
Connection to obtain a new Statement
object. Statement stmt = con.
createStatement(); A query that
returns data can be executed using
the executeQuery() method of
Statement. This method executes the
statement and returns a java. sql.
ResultSet that encapsulates the
retrieved data: ResultSet rs = stmt.
executeQuery(”SELECT * FROM some
table”); d) Process the results :
ResultSet returns one row at a time.
Next() method of ResultSet object
can be called to move to the next
row. The getString() and getObject()
methods are used for retrieving
column values: while(rs. next()) {
String event = rs. getString(”event”);
Object count = (Integer) rs.
getObject(”count”);
-
What type of driver did you use
in project?- JDBC-ODBC Bridge
driver (is a driver that uses
native(C language) libraries and
makes calls to an existing ODBC
driver to access a database engine).
-
What are the types of statements
in JDBC?- Statement: to be used
createStatement() method for
executing single SQL statement
PreparedStatement — To be used
preparedStatement() method for
executing same SQL statement over
and over. CallableStatement — To be
used prepareCall() method for
multiple SQL statements over and
over.
-
What is stored procedure?-
Stored procedure is a group of SQL
statements that forms a logical unit
and performs a particular task.
Stored Procedures are used to
encapsulate a set of operations or
queries to execute on database.
Stored procedures can be compiled
and executed with different
parameters and results and may have
any combination of input/output
parameters.
-
How to create and call stored
procedures?- To create stored
procedures: Create procedure
procedurename (specify in, out and
in out parameters) BEGIN Any
multiple SQL statement; END; To call
stored procedures: CallableStatement
csmt = con. prepareCall(”{call
procedure name(?,?)}”); csmt.
registerOutParameter(column no. ,
data type); csmt. setInt(column no.
, column name) csmt. execute();
-
What is servlet?- Servlets
are modules that extend
request/response-oriented servers,
such as java-enabled web servers.
For example, a servlet might be
responsible for taking data in an
HTML order-entry form and applying
the business logic used to update a
company’s order database.
-
What are the classes and
interfaces for servlets?- There
are two packages in servlets and
they are javax. servlet and
-
What is the difference between an
applet and a servlet?- a)
Servlets are to servers what applets
are to browsers. b) Applets must
have graphical user interfaces
whereas servlets have no graphical
user interfaces.
-
What is the difference between
doPost and doGet methods?- a)
doGet() method is used to get
information, while doPost() method
is used for posting information. b)
doGet() requests can’t send large
amount of information and is limited
to 240-255 characters. However,
doPost()requests passes all of its
data, of unlimited length. c) A
doGet() request is appended to the
request URL in a query string and
this allows the exchange is visible
to the client, whereas a doPost()
request passes directly over the
socket connection as part of its
HTTP request body and the exchange
are invisible to the client.
-
What is the life cycle of a
servlet?- Each Servlet has the
same life cycle: a) A server loads
and initializes the servlet by init
() method. b) The servlet handles
zero or more client’s requests
through service() method. c) The
server removes the servlet through
destroy() method.
-
Who is loading the init() method
of servlet?- Web server
-
What are the different servers
available for developing and
deploying Servlets?- a) Java Web
Server b) JRun g) Apache Server h)
Netscape Information Server i) Web
Logic
-
How many ways can we track client
and what are they?- The servlet
API provides two ways to track
client state and they are: a) Using
Session tracking and b) Using
Cookies.
-
What is session tracking and how
do you track a user session in
servlets?- Session tracking is a
mechanism that servlets use to
maintain state about a series
requests from the same user across
some period of time. The methods
used for session tracking are: a)
User Authentication - occurs when a
web server restricts access to some
of its resources to only those
clients that log in using a
recognized username and password. b)
Hidden form fields - fields are
added to an HTML form that are not
displayed in the client’s browser.
When the form containing the fields
is submitted, the fields are sent
back to the server. c) URL rewriting
- every URL that the user clicks on
is dynamically modified or rewritten
to include extra information. The
extra information can be in the form
of extra path information, added
parameters or some custom,
server-specific URL change. d)
Cookies - a bit of information that
is sent by a web server to a browser
and which can later be read back
from that browser. e) HttpSession-
places a limit on the number of
sessions that can exist in memory.
This limit is set in the session.
maxresidents property.
-
What is Server-Side Includes (SSI)?-
Server-Side Includes allows
embedding servlets within HTML pages
using a special servlet tag. In many
servlets that support servlets, a
page can be processed by the server
to include output from servlets at
certain points inside the HTML page.
This is accomplished using a special
internal SSINCLUDE, which processes
the servlet tags. SSINCLUDE servlet
will be invoked whenever a file with
an. shtml extension is requested. So
HTML files that include server-side
includes must be stored with an .
shtml extension.
-
What are cookies and how will you
use them?- Cookies are a
mechanism that a servlet uses to
have a client hold a small amount of
state-information associated with
the user. a) Create a cookie with
the Cookie constructor: public
Cookie(String name, String value) b)
A servlet can send a cookie to the
client by passing a Cookie object to
the addCookie() method of
HttpServletResponse: public void
HttpServletResponse.
addCookie(Cookie cookie) c) A
servlet retrieves cookies by calling
the getCookies() method of
HttpServletRequest: public Cookie[ ]
HttpServletRequest. getCookie().
-
Is it possible to communicate
from an applet to servlet and how
many ways and how?- Yes, there
are three ways to communicate from
an applet to servlet and they are:
a) HTTP Communication(Text-based and
object-based) b) Socket
Communication c) RMI Communication
-
What is connection pooling?-
With servlets, opening a database
connection is a major bottleneck
because we are creating and tearing
down a new connection for every page
request and the time taken to create
connection will be more. Creating a
connection pool is an ideal approach
for a complicated servlet. With a
connection pool, we can duplicate
only the resources we need to
duplicate rather than the entire
servlet. A connection pool can also
intelligently manage the size of the
pool and make sure each connection
remains valid. A number of
connection pool packages are
currently available. Some like
DbConnectionBroker are freely
available from Java Exchange Works
by creating an object that dispenses
connections and connection Ids on
request. The ConnectionPool class
maintains a Hastable, using
Connection objects as keys and
Boolean values as stored values. The
Boolean value indicates whether a
connection is in use or not. A
program calls getConnection() method
of the ConnectionPool for getting
Connection object it can use; it
calls returnConnection() to give the
connection back to the pool.
-
Why should we go for interservlet
communication?- Servlets running
together in the same server
communicate with each other in
several ways. The three major
reasons to use interservlet
communication are: a) Direct servlet
manipulation - allows to gain access
to the other currently loaded
servlets and perform certain tasks
(through the ServletContext object)
b) Servlet reuse - allows the
servlet to reuse the public methods
of another servlet. c) Servlet
collaboration - requires to
communicate with each other by
sharing specific information
(through method invocation)
-
Is it possible to call servlet
with parameters in the URL?-
Yes. You can call a servlet with
parameters in the syntax as (?Param1
= xxx || m2 = yyy).
-
What is Servlet chaining?-
Servlet chaining is a technique in
which two or more servlets can
cooperate in servicing a single
request. In servlet chaining, one
servlet’s output is piped to the
next servlet’s input. This process
continues until the last servlet is
reached. Its output is then sent
back to the client.
-
How do servlets handle multiple
simultaneous requests?- The
server has multiple threads that are
available to handle requests. When a
request comes in, it is assigned to
a thread, which calls a service
method (for example: doGet(), doPost()
and service()) of the servlet. For
this reason, a single servlet object
can have its service methods called
by many threads at once.
-
What is the difference between
TCP/IP and UDP?- TCP/IP is a
two-way communication between the
client and the server and it is a
reliable and there is a confirmation
regarding reaching the message to
the destination. It is like a phone
call. UDP is a one-way communication
only between the client and the
server and it is not a reliable and
there is no confirmation regarding
reaching the message to the
destination. It is like a postal
mail.
-
What is Inet address?- Every
computer connected to a network has
an IP address. An IP address is a
number that uniquely identifies each
computer on the Net. An IP address
is a 32-bit number.
-
What is Domain Naming Service(DNS)?-
It is very difficult to remember a
set of numbers(IP address) to
connect to the Internet. The Domain
Naming Service(DNS) is used to
overcome this problem. It maps one
particular IP address to a string of
characters. For example, www. mascom.
com implies com is the domain name
reserved for US commercial sites,
moscom is the name of the company
and www is the name of the specific
computer, which is mascom’s server.
-
What is URL?- URL stands for
Uniform Resource Locator and it
points to resource files on the
Internet. URL has four components:
http://www. address. com:80/index.html,
where http - protocol name, address
- IP address or host name, 80 - port
number and index.html - file path.
-
What is RMI and steps involved in
developing an RMI object?-
Remote Method Invocation (RMI)
allows java object that executes on
one machine and to invoke the method
of a Java object to execute on
another machine. The steps involved
in developing an RMI object are: a)
Define the interfaces b)
Implementing these interfaces c)
Compile the interfaces and their
implementations with the java
compiler d) Compile the server
implementation with RMI compiler e)
Run the RMI registry f) Run the
application
-
What is RMI architecture?-
RMI architecture consists of four
layers and each layer performs
specific functions: a) Application
layer - contains the actual object
definition. b) Proxy layer -
consists of stub and skeleton. c)
Remote Reference layer - gets the
stream of bytes from the transport
layer and sends it to the proxy
layer. d) Transportation layer -
responsible for handling the actual
machine-to-machine communication.
-
what is UnicastRemoteObject?-
All remote objects must extend
UnicastRemoteObject, which provides
functionality that is needed to make
objects available from remote
machines.
-
Explain the methods, rebind() and
lookup() in Naming class?-
rebind() of the Naming class(found
in java. rmi) is used to update the
RMI registry on the server machine.
Naming. rebind(”AddSever”,
AddServerImpl); lookup() of the
Naming class accepts one argument,
the rmi URL and returns a reference
to an object of type AddServerImpl.
-
What is a Java Bean?- A Java
Bean is a software component that
has been designed to be reusable in
a variety of different environments.
-
What is a Jar file?- Jar file
allows to efficiently deploying a
set of classes and their associated
resources. The elements in a jar
file are compressed, which makes
downloading a Jar file much faster
than separately downloading several
uncompressed files. The package
java. util. zip contains classes
that read and write jar files.
-
What is BDK?- BDK, Bean
Development Kit is a tool that
enables to create, configure and
connect a set of set of Beans and it
can be used to test Beans without
writing a code.
-
What is JSP?- JSP is a
dynamic scripting capability for web
pages that allows Java as well as a
few special tags to be embedded into
a web file (HTML/XML, etc). The
suffix traditionally ends with .jsp
to indicate to the web server that
the file is a JSP files. JSP is a
server side technology - you can’t
do any client side validation with
it. The advantages are: a) The JSP
assists in making the HTML more
functional. Servlets on the other
hand allow outputting of HTML but it
is a tedious process. b) It is easy
to make a change and then let the
JSP capability of the web server you
are using deal with compiling it
into a servlet and running it.
-
What are JSP scripting elements?-
JSP scripting elements lets to
insert Java code into the servlet
that will be generated from the
current JSP page. There are three
forms: a) Expressions of the form
<%= expression %> that are evaluated
and inserted into the output, b)
Scriptlets of the form<% code %>that
are inserted into the servlet’s
service method, and c) Declarations
of the form <%! Code %>that are
inserted into the body of the
servlet class, outside of any
existing methods.
-
What are JSP Directives?- A
JSP directive affects the overall
structure of the servlet class. It
usually has the following form:<%@
directive attribute=”value” %>
However, you can also combine
multiple attribute settings for a
single directive, as follows:<%@
directive attribute1=”value1″
attribute 2=”value2″ . . .
attributeN =”valueN” %> There are
two main types of directive: page,
which lets to do things like import
classes, customize the servlet
superclass, and the like; and
include, which lets to insert a file
into the servlet class at the time
the JSP file is translated into a
servlet
-
What are Predefined variables or
implicit objects?- To simplify
code in JSP expressions and
scriptlets, we can use eight
automatically defined variables,
sometimes called implicit objects.
They are request, response, out,
session, application, config,
pageContext, and page.
-
What are JSP ACTIONS?- JSP
actions use constructs in XML syntax
to control the behavior of the
servlet engine. You can dynamically
insert a file, reuse JavaBeans
components, forward the user to
another page, or generate HTML for
the Java plugin. Available actions
include: jsp:include - Include a
file at the time the page is
requested. jsp:useBean - Find or
instantiate a JavaBean.
jsp:setProperty - Set the property
of a JavaBean. jsp:getProperty -
Insert the property of a JavaBean
into the output. jsp:forward -
Forward the requester to a newpage.
Jsp: plugin - Generate
browser-specific code that makes an
OBJECT or EMBED
-
How do you pass data (including
JavaBeans) to a JSP from a servlet?-
(1) Request Lifetime: Using this
technique to pass beans, a request
dispatcher (using either “include”
or forward”) can be called. This
bean will disappear after processing
this request has been completed.
Servlet: request.
setAttribute(”theBean”, myBean);
RequestDispatcher rd =
getServletContext().
getRequestDispatcher(”thepage. jsp”);
rd. forward(request, response); JSP
PAGE:<jsp: useBean id=”theBean”
scope=”request” class=”. . . . . ”
/>(2) Session Lifetime: Using this
technique to pass beans that are
relevant to a particular session
(such as in individual user login)
over a number of requests. This bean
will disappear when the session is
invalidated or it times out, or when
you remove it. Servlet: HttpSession
session = request. getSession(true);
session. putValue(”theBean”, myBean);
/* You can do a request dispatcher
here, or just let the bean be
visible on the next request */ JSP
Page:<jsp:useBean id=”theBean”
scope=”session” class=”. . . ” /> 3)
Application Lifetime: Using this
technique to pass beans that are
relevant to all servlets and JSP
pages in a particular app, for all
users. For example, I use this to
make a JDBC connection pool object
available to the various servlets
and JSP pages in my apps. This bean
will disappear when the servlet
engine is shut down, or when you
remove it. Servlet:
GetServletContext().
setAttribute(”theBean”, myBean); JSP
PAGE:<jsp:useBean id=”theBean”
scope=”application” class=”. . . ”
/>
-
How can I set a cookie in JSP?-
response. setHeader(”Set-Cookie”,
“cookie string”); To give the
response-object to a bean, write a
method setResponse (HttpServletResponse
response) - to the bean, and in jsp-file:<%
bean. setResponse (response); %>
-
How can I delete a cookie with
JSP?- Say that I have a cookie
called “foo, ” that I set a while
ago & I want it to go away. I
simply: <% Cookie killCookie = new
Cookie(”foo”, null); KillCookie.
setPath(”/”); killCookie.
setMaxAge(0); response.
addCookie(killCookie); %>
-
How are Servlets and JSP Pages
related?- JSP pages are focused
around HTML (or XML) with Java codes
and JSP tags inside them. When a web
server that has JSP support is asked
for a JSP page, it checks to see if
it has already compiled the page
into a servlet. Thus, JSP pages
become servlets and are transformed
into pure Java and then compiled,
loaded into the server and executed.