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A

PROJECT REPORT

ON

“Internet Tools and Web Technology”

SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE


REQUIREMENT FOR THE AWARD OF THE
DEGREE

OF

BACHELOR OF COMPUTER APPLICATION

Submitted to: - Submitted by: -


Vishesh Patni
Kushal Badgujar

Lecturer (IT) BCA Final year

DEPARTMENT OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

Sharamjivi College, AJMER


M.D.S UNIVERSITY

Sharamjivi College, Ajmer


2017-2018

Sharamjivi College, Ajmer


PROJECT EVALUATION SHEET

PROJECT TITLE :- Internet Tools and Web Technology

SUBMITTED FOR :- BCA Final Year

YEAR :- 2017-18

Name Roll Enrollment Max Min Marks


Number Marks Marks Awarded

Vishesh Patni 100


Kushal Badgujar

College name & code :


Sharamjivi College (Ajmer)

Roll Name External Viva Voce Total

Vishesh Patni
Kushal Badgujar

Signature

(External Examinor)
CERTIFICATE

This is to certify that the Internet Tools and Web Technology is the original work
done by VISHESH PATNI & KUSHAL BADGUJAR. The Report they prepared is
being submitted in partial fulfillment of Master of Computer Science requirement at
the …SHARAMJIVI College... Ajmer.

The content in this report is carried out under the guidance and cooperation of
.

DATE / /_2018_

Mr. Mr.

(HOD of Computer Department) (Principal)

Comments by examiner :

External Examiner
CANDIDATE’S DECLARATION

We undersigned , hearty declaration that the research project report written &
submitted by VISHESH PATNI & KUSHAL BADGUJAR undersigned under the
guidence of our lecturers & project guided by

It is our original work . The emperical finding in this project report are based on
“INTERNET TOOLS AND WEB TECHNOLOGY”.

We have not it from any were ,in case if any copying or use of unfair means is
justified against us then board id free athourity to take any presided actoin against us.

Sr. no Roll.no. Name Enroll.no Signature

1. VISHESH PATNI
2. KUSHAL
BADGUJAR

Name & Signature of student

Date:

Place: SHARAMJIVI COLLEGE, AJMER


Contents

Internet Basics
1. Introduction to HTML –
 List Creating Table
 Linking document
 Frames
 Graphics to HTML Doc
2. Style sheet –
 Style sheet basic
 Add style to document
 Creating style sheet rules
3. Style sheet properties –
 Font
 Text
 List
 Color and Background color
 Box
 Display properties

Introduction to JavaScript
4. Advantage of JavaScript –
 JavaScript syntax
 Data type
 Variable
 Array
 Operator and Expression
 Looping Constructor
 Function
 Dialog box.

JavaScript document object model


5. Introduction to Javascript Document Object Model –
 object in HTML
 Event Handling
 Window object
 Document object
 Browser Object
 Form Object
 Navigator object
 Screen object
 Build in object
 User defined object
ASP.NET Languages structure
 Page event
 Properties & Compiler Directives
 HTML server controls –
o Anchor
o Tables
o Forms
o Forms
o Files
 Basic web server Controls –
o Label
o Textbox
o Button
o Image
o Links
o Check & Radio button
o Hyperlink
 Data list Web server controls –
o Check box list
o Radio button list
o Drop down list
o List box, and Data grid
o Repeater

Request and Response Objects


 Cookies
 Working with Data
 OLEDB connection class
 Command class transaction class
 Data adaptor class
 Data set class
 Advanced Issues
 Email
 Application Security
 Authentication
 IP Address
 Secure by SSL & Client Certificates.
Internet Basic:

The internet begin 1969, as an four computer network called ARPAnet


which was designed by the U.S. Defense Department so that research scientists
could communicate .In approximate two year, ARPAnet grew to about two-
dozen sites and by 1981,consisted of more then two hundred sites in 1990,
ARPAnet was officially disbanded and the network, which now consisted of
hundred sits, came to be know as the feature .

ARPANET : Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (1969)

A network of networks, joining many government, university and private


computers together and providing an infrastructure for the use of E-mail,
bulletin boards, search for information over Internet, enjoy Internet surfing ,
file archives, hypertext documents, databases and other computational
resources

Internet service provider (ISP), also sometimes referred to as an Internet


access provider (IAP), is a company that offers its customers access to the
Internet. The ISP connects to its customers using a data transmission
technology appropriate for delivering Internet Protocol datagram‘s, such as
dial-up, DSL, cable modem, wireless or dedicated high-speed interconnects

WWW : World Wide Web Created 1989

This information is almost always retrieved using the Hypertext Transfer


Protocol (HTTP). In fact HTTP has been in use by the World Wide Web since
1989, and its use has increased steadily over the years. Today there are
millions of Web sites on the World Wide Web, all of them using HTTP

The internet consists of two types of computer SERVER and CLIENT

 Computer which offer information of be read are called Server


 Computer that read the information offered are called client

Client-server computing or networking is a distributed application


architecture that partitions tasks or work loads between service providers
(servers) and service requesters, called clients

Current Servers
Google- http://www.google.com
Info seek- http://guide.infoseek.com
Alta Vista – http://www.altavista.digital.com
Lycos – http://www.lycos.com
Yahoo! – http://www.yahoo.com

Domain

A domain is logical grouping of computers on a network. It may include


multiple networks. It may also just be a subset of a network of
computers.
""

com
edu gov int mil net org

nominum
metainfo berkeley nwu nato army uu

west
east www

dakota
tornado

The top level domains

 com ... for commercial entities


 edu ... for four-year educational institutions
 gov ... for non-military, United States federal government instititutions
 mil ... for United States military organizations
 net ... for network operations and Internet Service Providers (ISP)
 org ... for non-profit organizations

Uniform Resource Locator (URL)

Consists of 4 parts:

Protocol  Hyper Text Transfer Protocol (HTTP)

Domain Name  or Internet Protocol (IP) address

Directory

Filename

Specific document filename


index. (s) htm(l) or default.(s)htm(l)
Example:
http://www.google.com
TCP/IP

TCP/IP is an abbreviation for Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol.

TCP is a lossless protocol, requiring a handshake to insure that data is not lost
during transmission.

Internet Protocol (IP) uses addresses which are a series of four "octet" (byte)
numbers in a dotted decimal notation. For example: 199.246.24.130

Application (process-to-process) Layer: This is the scope within which


applications create user data and communicate this data to other processes or
applications on another or the same host. The communications partners are
often called peers. This is where the "higher level" protocols such as SMTP, FTP,
SSH, HTTP, etc. operate.

Transport (host-to-host) Layer: The Transport Layer constitutes the networking


regime between two network hosts, either on the local network or on remote
networks separated by routers. The Transport Layer provides a uniform
networking interface that hides the actual topology (layout) of the underlying
network connections.

Internet (internetworking) Layer: The Internet Layer has the task of


exchanging datagram across network boundaries. It is therefore also referred
to as the layer that establishes internetworking; indeed, it defines and
establishes the Internet

Link Layer: This layer defines the networking methods with the scope of the
local network link on which hosts communicate without intervening routers.
This layer describes the protocols used to describe the local network topology
and the interfaces needed to affect transmission of Internet Layer datagram‘s
to next-neighbor hosts.

Internet Use:

Internet used in business, education, Marketing, sales , research, online


reservation , online trade , software development , job searching, video
conference, Email ,File Transfer, chatting, etc.,
HTML

History
To make a long story short, HTML was invented in 1990 by a scientist
called Tim Berners-Lee. The purpose was to make it easier for scientists at
different universities to gain access to each other's research documents

HTML stands for Hyper Text Markup Language


HTML is not a programming language, it is a markup language
A markup language is a set of markup tags
HTML uses markup tags to describe web pages

HTML Tags
HTML markup tags are usually called HTML tags
HTML tags are keywords surrounded by angle brackets like <html>
HTML tags normally come in pairs like <b> and </b>
The first tag in a pair is the start tag, the second tag is the end tag
Start and end tags are also called opening tags and closing tags
HTML Documents = Web Pages

 HTML documents describe web pages


 HTML documents contain HTML tags and plain text
 HTML documents are also called web pages

The purpose of a web browser (like Internet Explorer or Firebox) is to read


HTML documents and display them as web pages. The browser does not display
the HTML tags, but uses the tags to interpret the content of the page

<html>
<body>
<h1>My First Heading</h1>
<p>My first paragraph</p> </body> </html>

Example Explained

 The text between <html> and </html> describes the web page
 The text between <body> and </body> is the visible page content
 The text between <h1> and </h1> is displayed as a heading
 The text between <p> and </p> is displayed as a paragraph

HTML Element Syntax

 An HTML element starts with a start tag / opening tag


 An HTML element ends with an end tag / closing tag
 The element content is everything between the start and the end tag
 Some HTML elements have empty content
 Empty elements are closed in the start tag
 Most HTML elements can have attributes

Tag Description

Basic

<!DOCTYPE> Defines the document type

<html> Defines an HTML document

<body> Defines the document's body

<h1> to <h6> Defines HTML headings

<p> Defines a paragraph

<br /> Inserts a single line break

<hr /> Defines a horizontal line

<!--...--> Defines a comment

Formatting

<acronym> Defines an acronym

<abbr> Defines an abbreviation

<address> Defines contact information for the author/owner of a document

<b> Defines bold text

<bdo> Defines the text direction

<big> Defines big text

<blockquote> Defines a long quotation

<center> Deprecated. Defines centered text

<cite> Defines a citation

<code> Defines computer code text


<del> Defines deleted text

<dfn> Defines a definition term

<em> Defines emphasized text

<font> Deprecated. Defines font, color, and size for text

<i> Defines italic text

<ins> Defines inserted text

<kbd> Defines keyboard text

<pre> Defines preformatted text

<q> Defines a short quotation

<s> Deprecated. Defines strikethrough text

<samp> Defines sample computer code

<small> Defines small text

<strike> Deprecated. Defines strikethrough text

<strong> Defines strong text

<sub> Defines subscripted text

<sup> Defines superscripted text

<tt> Defines teletype text

<u> Deprecated. Defines underlined text

<var> Defines a variable part of a text

<xmp> Deprecated. Defines preformatted text

Forms

<form> Defines an HTML form for user input

<input /> Defines an input control

<textarea> Defines a multi-line text input control


<button> Defines a push button

<select> Defines a select list (drop-down list)

<optgroup> Defines a group of related options in a select list

<option> Defines an option in a select list

<label> Defines a label for an input element

<fieldset> Defines a border around elements in a form

<legend> Defines a caption for a fieldset element

<isindex> Deprecated. Defines a searchable index related to a document

Frames

<frame /> Defines a window (a frame) in a frameset

<frameset> Defines a set of frames

<noframes> Defines an alternate content for users that do not support frames

<iframe> Defines an inline frame

Images

<img /> Defines an image

<map> Defines an image-map

<area /> Defines an area inside an image-map

Links

<a> Defines an anchor

<link /> Defines the relationship between a document and an external resource

Lists

<ul> Defines an unordered list

<ol> Defines an ordered list

<li> Defines a list item


<dir> Deprecated. Defines a directory list

<dl> Defines a definition list

<dt> Defines a term (an item) in a definition list

<dd> Defines a description of a term in a definition list

<menu> Deprecated. Defines a menu list

Tables

<table> Defines a table

<caption> Defines a table caption

<th> Defines a header cell in a table

<tr> Defines a row in a table

<td> Defines a cell in a table

<thead> Groups the header content in a table

<tbody> Groups the body content in a table

<tfoot> Groups the footer content in a table

<col /> Defines attribute values for one or more columns in a table

<colgroup> Defines a group of columns in a table for formatting

Styles

<style> Defines style information for a document

<div> Defines a section in a document

<span> Defines a section in a document

Meta Info

<head> Defines information about the document

<title> Defines the document title

<meta> Defines metadata about an HTML document


<base /> Defines a default address or a default target for all links on a page

<basefont /> Deprecated. Defines a default font, color, or size for the text in a page

Programming

<script> Defines a client-side script

<noscript> Defines an alternate content for users that do not support client-side scripts

<applet> Deprecated. Defines an embedded applet

<object> Defines an embedded object

<param /> Defines a parameter for an object

Text property

This page deals with html tags for formatting a webpage with text and
will show how to create a headline, how to make paragraphs, how to pick fonts
and change their color and size .Use the H tag to create a headline, the h
tag comes in six flavors

HTML Headings Property


<h1>Heading 1</h1>

<h6>Heading 6</h6>

Text align

Syntax: align= [left | center | right | justify]

Example
<H5 align=left>Hello World</H5>

The FONT tag

Fonts are one of the most important visual elements of your page and if
you're like most web designers you'll want to set a few fonts in every page.

Probably the most versatile text formatting tag is


the <FONT></FONT> tag the font tag not only allows the color and size of text
to be selected but also allows specific fonts to be selected

Example of the font tag

<FONT face="arial">this is the arial font face</FONT>

<FONT size=4>size 4</FONT>


<FONT size=3>size 3</FONT>
<FONT size=2>size 2</FONT>
<FONT size=1>size 1</FONT

The font tag gives enough flexibility to allow html authors to specify
a 'back up' font

<FONT face="georgic, times new roman, aerial">alternative fonts</FONT>

Font styles
use the <B></B> tags to make text <B>bold</B>

use the <EM></EM> tags to <EM>emphasise text</EM>

use the <U></U> tags to <U>underline text</U>

use the <I></I> tags to make<I>italic text</I>

use the <BIG></BIG> tags to <BIG>increase the font size by


+1</BIG>
the maximum font size is 7

use the <SMALL></SMALL> tags to <SMALL>decrease the font size by -


1</SMALL>
the minimum font size is 1

Horizontal Rule
Here's a horizontal rule... <hr /> ...that was a horizontal rule :)

Text Formatting Tags


Tag Description

<b> Defines bold text

<big> Defines big text


<em> Defines emphasized text

<i> Defines italic text

<small> Defines small text

<strong> Defines strong text

<sub> Defines subscripted text

<sup> Defines superscripted text

<ins> Defines inserted text

<del> Defines deleted text

<s> Deprecated. Use <del> instead

<strike> Deprecated. Use <del> instead

<u> Deprecated. Use styles instead

Example Program

<html><body>

<center><p><b>This text is bold</b></p>

<p><big>This text is big</big></p>

<p><i>This text is italic</i></p>

<p><code>This is computer output</code></p>

<p>This is<sub> subscript</sub> and <sup>superscript</sup></p>

</center>

</body></html>

Listing Property

There are 3 different types of lists. A <ol> tag starts an ordered list, <ul> for
unordered lists, and <dl> for definition lists. Use the type and start attributes
to fine tune your lists accordingly.
Unordered lists

HTML-CODE EXPLANATION / EXAMPLE

<ul> Makes a bulleted list using the default bullet type:


<li>text</li>
<li>text</li>  text
</ul>  text

 This is another line


<ul type="disc">
 And this is the final line

o This is another line


<ul type="circle">
o And this is the final line

 This is another line


<ul type="square">  And this is the final line

NUMBERED LISTS

Plain numbers

Capital Letters

Small Letters

Capital Roman Numbers

Small Roman Numbers

HTML-CODEEXP EXPLANATION/ EXAMPLE

<ol><li>text</li> 1. text
<li>text</li></ol> 2. text

Starts a numbered list, first # being 5.


<ol start="5">
5. This is one line
6. This is another line

<ol type="A"> A. This is one line


B. This is another line
<ol type="a"> a. This is one line
b. This is another line

<ol type="I"> I. This is one line


II. This is another line

<ol type="1"> i. This is one line


ii. This is another line

VII. This is one line


<ol type="I" start="7"> III. This is another line

Hyperlinks, Anchors, and Links


Links -- they're what made the web The Web. The ability to link from one
document to another is one of the most central features of HTML
Links, otherwise known as hyperlinks, are defined using the <a> tag -
otherwise known as the anchor element.

To create a hyperlink, you use the tag in conjunction with the href
attribute (href stands for Hypertext Reference). The value of the href attribute
is the URL, or, location of where the link is pointing to.
Hyper Link syntax:

<a href="url">Link text</a>

The element content doesn't have to be text. You can link from an image or any
other HTML element.

Example:

<a href="http://www.yahoo.com/">Visit yahoo!</a>

Image Link

In HTML, images are defined with the <img> tag. The <img> tag is empty,
which means that it contains attributes only and it has no closing tag.

To display an image on a page, you need to use the src attribute. Src stands for
"source". The value of the src attribute is the URL of the image you want to
display on your page..

To embed an image into a web page, the image first needs to exist in either
.jpg, .gif, or .png format.
Image Link syntax:

<img src="url" />

Example:

<img src="smile.gif" width="100" height="100" alt="Smile" />

Src: This is the path to the image. It can be either an absolute path, or a
relative path

Width: This specifies the width to display the image. If the actual image is
wider, it will shrink to the dimensions you specify here. Likewise, if the actual
image is smaller it will expand to your dimensions. I don't recommend
specifying a different size for the image, as it will lose quality. It's better to
make sure the image is the correct size to start with.

Height: This specifies the height to display the image. This attribute works
similar to the width

Alt: Alternate text. This specifies text to be used in case the browser/user
agent can't render the image.

E-mail Link

<a href="mailto:dharmak07@gmail.com?subject=Hello%20Sir">

Send Mail</a>

Example Program

<html><body><p>

This is a mail link:

<a href="mailto:dharmak07@gmail.com?subject=Hello%20sir">

Send Mail</a></p>

<img src="Blue hills.jpg" width="100" height="100" alt="Smile" >

</body></html>

HTML Colors
Colors are displayed combining RED, GREEN, and BLUE light.
HTML colors are defined using a hexadecimal (hex) notation for the combination
of Red, Green, and Blue color values (RGB).

The lowest value that can be given to one of the light sources is 0 (hex 00).
The highest value is 255 (hex FF).

Hex values are written as 3 double digit numbers, starting with a # sign.

Font color
Set the color of your font with color

Example:

<font color="#990000">This text is hexcolor #990000</font><br />

<font color="red">This text is red</font>

Background Color :

The background color used for web page background color.

Example: <body bgColor=Navy>

Border color:

It‘s used for Image,table ., border color

HTML Tables

A table is a two dimensional matrix ,consiter od rows and coloms .Table


are intended for displaying data in coloumns on web page.Tables are defined
with the <table> tag. A table is divided into rows (with the <tr> tag), and each
row is divided into data cells (with the <td> tag). The letters td stands for
"table data," which is the content of a data cell. A data cell can contain text,
images, lists, paragraphs, forms, horizontal rules, tables, etc.

Table property

Tag Description

<table> Defines a table

<th> Defines a table header


<tr> Defines a table row

<td> Defines a table cell

<caption> Defines a table caption

<colgroup> Defines groups of table columns

<col> Defines the attribute values for one or more columns in a table

<thead> Defines a table head

<tbody> Defines a table body

<tfoot> Defines a table footer

Example 1:

<table border="1">
<tr>
<td>row 1, cell 1</td>
<td>row 1, cell 2</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>row 2, cell 1</td>
<td>row 2, cell 2</td>
</tr>
</table>

Output:

row 1, cell 1 row 1, cell 2


row 2, cell 1 row 2, cell 2

Headings in a Table
<table border="1">
<tr>
<th>Heading</th>
<th>Another Heading</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>row 1, cell 1</td>
<td>row 1, cell 2</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>row 2, cell 1</td>
<td>row 2, cell 2</td>
</tr>
</table>
Output:

Heading Another Heading


row 1, cell 1 row 1, cell 2
row 2, cell 1 row 2, cell 2

Use rowspan to span multiple rows and colspan to span multiple


columns.

<table border="1"> <tr>

<th>Column 1</th>

<th>Column 2</th>

<th>Column 3</th> </tr>

<tr><td rowspan="2">Row 1 Cell 1</td>

<td>Row 1 Cell 2</td><td>Row 1 Cell 3</td></tr>

<tr><td>Row 2 Cell 2</td><td>Row 2 Cell 3</td></tr>

<tr><td colspan="3">Row 3 Cell 1</td></tr>

</table>

Output

Column 1 Column 2 Column 3


Row 1 Cell 2 Row 1 Cell 3
Row 1 Cell 1
Row 2 Cell 2 Row 2 Cell 3
Row 3 Cell 1

Table with color

<table border="1" cellpadding="10" bgcolor="rgb(0,255,0)">

<tr>
<th>Column 1</th>

<th>Column 2</th> </tr>

<tr><td>Row 1 Cell 1</td><td>Row 1 Cell 2</td></tr>

<tr><td>Row 2 Cell 1</td><td>Row 2 Cell 2</td></tr>

</table>

Output

Column 1 Column 2

Row 1 Cell 1 Row 1 Cell 2

Row 2 Cell 1 Row 2 Cell 2

HTML Frames
With frames, you can display more than one HTML document in the same
browser window. Each HTML document is called a frame, and each frame is
independent of the others.

The disadvantages of using frames are:

The web developer must keep track of more HTML documents

It is difficult to print the entire page

The Frameset Tag

The <frameset> tag defines how to divide the window into frames

Each frameset defines a set of rows or columns

The values of the rows/columns indicate the amount of screen area each
row/column will occupy

Attribute Description

rows Specifies the number of rows and their height in either pixels,
percentages, or relative lengths. Default is 100%
cols Specifies the number of columns and their width in either pixels,
percentages, or relative lengths. Default is 100%

name Assigns a name to a frame. This is useful for loading contents into one
frame from another.

longdesc A long description - this can elaborate on a shorter description specified


with the title attribute.

src Location of the frame contents (for example, the HTML page to be
loaded into the frame).

noresize Specifies whether the frame is resizable or not (i.e. whether the user can
resize the frame or not).

scrolling Whether the frame should be scrollable or not (i.e. should scrollbars
appear). Possible values:

 auto
 yes
 no

frameborder Whether the frame should have a border or not. Possible values:

 1 (border)
 0 (no border)

marginwidth Specifies the margin, in pixels, between the frame's contents and it's left
and right margins.
marginheight Specifies the margin, in pixels, between the frame's contents and it's top
and bottom margins.
Example 1

<frameset cols="25%,75%">

<frame src="frame_a.htm">

<frame src="frame_b.htm"> </frameset>


Mixed frame set:

<html>

<frameset rows="50%,50%">

<frame src="frame_a.htm">

<frameset cols="25%,75%">

<frame src="frame_b.htm">

<frame src="frame_c.htm"></frameset></frameset> </html>

Style sheet
cascading style sheets are now the standard way to define the
presentation of your HTML pages, from fonts and colours to the complete layout
of a page. They are much more efficient than using HTML on every page to
define the look of your site.

CSS is becoming a more important language to know every day, so the


sooner you have a grip on this most elegant of presentational languages, the
better.

CSS Syntax

A CSS rule has two main parts: a selector, and one or more declarations:

The selector is normally the HTML element you want to style.

Each declaration consists of a property and a value.

The property is the style attribute you want to change. Each property has a
value.

CSS Example
CSS declarations always ends with a semicolon, and declaration groups
are surrounded by curly brackets:

<html> <head>

<style type="text/css">

P{

color:red;

text-align:center;

</style>

</head>

<body>

<p>Hello World!</p>

<p>This paragraph is styled with CSS.</p>

</body>

</html>

CSS Background

CSS background properties are used to define the background effects of


an element.

CSS properties used for background effects:

background-color

background-image

background-repeat

background-attachment

background-position

Background Color
The background-color property specifies the background color of an
element.

body {background-color:#b0c4de;}

Background Image
The background-image property specifies an image to use as the
background of an element.By default, the image is repeated so it covers the
entire element.

body {background-image:url('paper.gif');

Background Image - Repeat Horizontally or Vertically


By default, the background-image property repeats an image both
horizontally and vertically.Some images should be repeated only horizontally or
vertically, or they will look strange, like this:

body

{ background-image:url('gradient2.png'); }

All CSS Background Properties


Property Description Values

background Sets all the background properties background-color


in one declaration background-image
background-repeat
background-attachment
background-position
inherit

background-attachment Sets whether a background image scroll


is fixed or scrolls with the rest of fixed
the page inherit

background-color Sets the background color of an color-rgb


element color-hex
color-name
transparent
inherit

background-image Sets the background image for an url(URL)


element none
inherit
background-position Sets the starting position of a top left
background image top center
top right
center left
center center
center right
bottom left
bottom center
bottom right
x% y%
xpos ypos
inherit

background-repeat Sets if/how a background image repeat


will be repeated repeat-x
repeat-y
no-repeat
inherit

Text Color

The color property is used to set the color of the text. The color can be
specified by:

name - a color name, like "red"

RGB - an RGB value, like "rgb(255,0,0)"

Hex - a hex value, like "#ff0000"

Example
body {color:blue;}
h1 {color:#00ff00;}
h2 {color:rgb(255,0,0);

property Description Values

color Sets the color of a text color

direction Sets the text direction ltr


rtl

line-height Sets the distance between lines normal


number
length
letter-spacing Increase or decrease the space between normal
characters length

text-align Aligns the text in an element left


right
center
justify

text-decoration Adds decoration to text none


underline
overline
line-through
blink

text-indent Indents the first line of text in an element length


%

text-shadow none
color
length

text-transform Controls the letters in an element none


capitalize
uppercase
lowercase

unicode-bidi normal
embed
bidi-override

vertical-align Sets the vertical alignment of an element baseline


sub
super
top,text-top
middle
bottom
text-bottom
length
%

white-space Sets how white space inside an element is normal


handled pre,nowrap

word-spacing Increase or decrease the space between normal


words length
Font Families

In CSS, there are two types of font family names:generic family - a group
of font families with a similar look (like "Serif" or "Monospace")

font family - a specific font family (like "Times New Roman" or "Arial")

Example

Property Description Values

font-family Specifies the font family for text family-name


generic-
family inherit

font-size Specifies the font size of text xx-small


x-small
small
medium
large
x-large
xx-large
smaller
larger
length
%
inherit

font-style Specifies the font style for text normal


italic
oblique
inherit

font-variant Specifies whether or not a text should be normal


displayed in a small-caps font small-caps
inherit

font-weight Specifies the weight of a font normal


bold

Example Program

<html> <head>
<style type="text/css">

p.normal {font-weight:normal;}

p.light {font-weight:lighter;}

p.thick {font-weight:bold;}

p.thicker {font-weight:900;}

</style></head>

<body>

<p class="normal">This is a paragraph.</p>

<p class="light">This is a paragraph.</p>

<p class="thick">This is a paragraph.</p>

<p class="thicker">This is a paragraph.</p>

</body></html>

List

In HTML, there are two types of lists:

unordered lists - the list items are marked with bullets

ordered lists - the list items are marked with numbers or letters

Example

ul.a {list-style-type: circle;}


ul.b {list-style-type: square;}

ol.c {list-style-type: upper-roman;}


ol.d {list-style-type: lower-alpha;}

Values for Unordered Lists


Value Description
none No marker
disc Default. The marker is a filled circle
circle The marker is a circle
square The marker is a square

Values for Ordered Lists


Value Description
armenian The marker is traditional Armenian numbering
decimal The marker is a number
decimal-leading-zero The marker is a number padded by initial zeros (01, 02, 03,
etc.)
georgian The marker is traditional Georgian numbering (an, ban, gan,
etc.)
lower-alpha The marker is lower-alpha (a, b, c, d, e, etc.)
lower-greek The marker is lower-greek (alpha, beta, gamma, etc.)
lower-latin The marker is lower-latin (a, b, c, d, e, etc.)
lower-roman The marker is lower-roman (i, ii, iii, iv, v, etc.)
upper-alpha The marker is upper-alpha (A, B, C, D, E, etc.)
upper-latin The marker is upper-latin (A, B, C, D, E, etc.)
upper-roman The marker is upper-roman (I, II, III, IV, V, etc.)
CSS Colors

CSS has several options for defining colors of both text and background areas
on your pages. These options can entirely replace the color attributes in plain
HTML. In addition, you get new options that you just didn't have in plain HTML.

Value Description
color <color>

transparent
background-color
<color>
none
background-image
url(<URL>)
repeat
repeat-x
background-repeat
repeat-y
no-repeat
scroll
background-attachment
fixed
<percentage>
<length>
top
background-position center
bottom
left
right
<background-color>
<background-image>
background <background-repeat>
<background-attachment>
<background-position>
color <color>
transparent
background-color
<color>
none
background-image
url(<URL>)
repeat
repeat-x
background-repeat
repeat-y
no-repeat
Example Program

<html><head>

<style type="text/css">

body{

background-color:#d0e4fe;}

h1

color:orange;

text-align:center;

font-family:"Times New Roman";

font-size:20px;

}</style></head>

<body>

<h1>CSS example!</h1>

<p>This is a paragraph.</p>
</body></html>

CSS Box Model

All HTML elements can be considered as boxes. In CSS, the term "box model" is
used when talking about design and layout.

The CSS box model is essentially a box that wraps around HTML elements, and
it consists of: margins, borders, padding, and the actual content.

The box model allows us to place a border around elements and space elements
in relation to other elements

Explanation of the different parts:

Margin - Clears an area around the border. The margin does not have a
background color, and it is completely transparent

Border - A border that lies around the padding and content. The border is
affected by the background color of the box

Padding - Clears an area around the content. The padding is affected by the
background color of the box

Content - The content of the box, where text and images appear

Example:

<html><head>

<style type="text/css">

div.ex

width:220px;

padding:10px;

border:5px solid gray;

margin:0px;

}
</style></head>

<body>

<img src="250px.gif" width="250" height="1" /><br /><br />

<div class="ex">The line above is 250px wide.<br />

The total width of this element is also 250px.</div>

</body>

</html>

CSS Display Property

The display property specifies if/how an element is displayed, and the visibility
property specifies if an element should be visible or hidden.

Hiding an Element - display:none or visibility:hidden


Hiding an element can be done by setting the display property to "none" or the
visibility property to "hidden". However, notice that these two methods produce
different results:

Example

h1.hidden {visibility:hidden;}

Changing How an Element is Displayed

Changing an inline element to a block element, or vice versa, can be useful for
making the page look a specific way, and still follow web standards.

li {display:inline;}

Example

<html><head>

<style type="text/css">

Span {

display:block;

</style> </head>
<body>

<h2>Nirvana</h2>

<span>Record: MTV Unplugged in New York</span>

<h2>Radiohead</h2>

<span>Record: OK Computer</span>

<span>Year: 1997</span></body></html>

JavaScript

JavaScript was designed to add interactivity to HTML pages


JavaScript is a scripting language
A scripting language is a lightweight programming language
JavaScript is usually embedded directly into HTML pages
JavaScript is an interpreted language (means that scripts execute without
preliminary compilation)
Everyone can use JavaScript without purchasing a license
JavaScript is case sensitive
JavaScript object-oriented Programming Language
Originally called Live Script when introduced in Netscape Navigator

Programming, HTML, and JavaScript


Created in 1989 European Laboratory for Particle Physics (Geneva Switzerland).
Developed by Netscape for use in Navigator Web Browsers

Purpose
Provide an easy way to access cross-referenced documents that exist on the
internet .Purpose make web pages (documents) more dynamic and interactive
Change contents of document, provide forms and controls, animation, control
web browser window, etc.

JavaScript Two formats:


Client-side Program runs on client (browser)
Server-side Program runs on server
Proprietary to web server platform
JavaScript use
 JavaScript can be used to validate data - A JavaScript can be used to
validate form data before it is submitted to a server. This saves the
server from extra processing
 JavaScript can be used to detect the visitor's browser - A
JavaScript can be used to detect the visitor's browser, and - depending
on the browser - load another page specifically designed for that browser
 JavaScript can be used to create cookies - A JavaScript can be used
to store and retrieve information on the visitor's computer
 JavaScript can react to events - A JavaScript can be set to execute
when something happens, like when a page has finished loading or when
a user clicks on an HTML element
 An interpreted language – which no compilation steps this provides
easy development process.
 Performance- the HTML files are fairly compact and quit small.

Syntax
<html>
<body>
<script type="text/javascript">
//your script goes here
</script>
</body>
</html>
And
<script type="text/javascript" src=‘path.js‘> </script>

Mostly in the head section of HTML file, use script tags and then enclose in
comments
Example:

<html>
<body>
<script type="text/javascript">
document.write("Hello World!");
</script>
</body>
</html>

Elements of JavaScript

Typical programming elements:


variables, operators, expressions, statements, definition of functions
Connection to Web
built-in functions (e.g., Date())
Document Object Model = names of ‗things‘, properties, methods (e.g.,
document.write)
events (e.g., onSubmit, onMouseOver)
Comments
o JavaScript supports two types of comments. Double-slashes (//) tell
JavaScript to ignore everything to the end of the line.
//document. write(‗alert‘);
o Block quotes begin a comment block with a slash-asterisk (/*) and
JavaScript will ignore everything from the start of the comment block
until it encounters an asterisk-slash (*/). Block quotes are useful for
temporally disabling large areas of code, or describing the purpose of a
function, or detailing the purpose and providing credits for the script
itself.

Variables
JavaScript is not a strongly typed language which means you rarely have
to concern yourself with the type of data a variable is storing, only what the
variable is storing and in JavaScript, variables can store anything, even
functions.
Syntax : var <variable Name> =value
Sample program for data type:

<html><body>

<script type="text/javascript">

x=5+5;

document.write(x);

document.write("<br />");

var a=5,b=10,c;

c=a+b;

document.write(c);

document.write("<br />");

var oct=0377,x=10,res;

res=oct+x;

document.write(res);

x=5+"5";
document.write(x);

document.write("<br />");

x="5"+5;

document.write(x);

document.write("<br />");

</script></body>

</html>

Array

Arrays are simply an ordered stack of data items with the same data type.
Using arrays, you can store multiple values under a single name. Instead of
using a separate variable for each item, you can use one array to hold all of
them.

Syntax

var arrayname = new Array(numberofelements)

Example : Array with sort Char

<html>

<body>

<script type="text/javascript">

var fruits = ["Banana", "Orange", "Apple", "Mango"];

document.write(fruits.sort());

</script></body>

</html>

Example : Array with sort No

<html>

<body>

<script type="text/javascript">

function sortNumber(a, b)

{
return b - a;

var n = ["10", "5", "40", "25", "100", "1"];

document.write(n.sort(sortNumber));

</script></body>

</html>

Dynamic Arrays:
In many a cases we will not want to create the array with a fixed size or
length. In such cases we can create an array with out passing length. This array
will dynamically set its value as and when a new variable or entry is added

Looping Constructor

A set of statements are executed as a loop until a condition is satisfied, the


condition is based on an incremental or decremental counter. In other words
"Looping statements in javascript are used to execute the same set of code a
specified number of times"

If Statement

Use the if statement to execute some code only if a specified condition is true.

Syntax

if (condition)
{
code to be executed if condition is true
}

If...else Statement

Use the if....else statement to execute some code if a condition is true and
another code if the condition is not true.

Syntax

if (condition)
{
code to be executed if condition is true
}
else
{
code to be executed if condition is not true
}

Example

<html><body>

<script type="text/javascript">

var a=5,b=10;

if(a>b)

document.write("A is big");

}else

document.write("B is big");

} </script> </body> </html>

Switch Statement:

Use the switch statement to select one of many blocks of code to be executed.

Syntax

switch(n)

{
case 1:
execute code block 1
break;
case 2:
execute code block 2
break;
default:
code to be executed if n is different from case 1 and 2
}

Example

<html><body>

<script type="text/javascript">

var d = new Date()


theDay=d.getDay()

switch (theDay)

case 1: document.write("SUNDAY")

break;

case 2: document.write("Mon Day")

break;

case 3: document.write("Tues day")

break;

default:

document.write("I'm really looking forward to this weekend!");

} </script> </body> </html>

while Loop

The while loop loops through a block of code while a specified condition is true.

Syntax

while (var<=endvalue)
{
code to be executed
}

Example

<html> <body>

<script type="text/javascript">

i=0

while (i <= 5)

document.write("The number is " + i)

document.write("<br>")
i++
}

</script> </body> </html>

do...while Loop

The do...while loop is a variant of the while loop. This loop will execute the
block of code ONCE, and then it will repeat the loop as long as the specified
condition is true.

Syntax

do
{
code to be executed
}
while (var<=endvalue);

Example

<script language="javascript">

var i=0;

do

document.write("Testing DO-While loop");

while(i!=0)

</script>

for Loop

The for loop is used when you know in advance how many times the script
should run.

Syntax
for(var=startvalue;var<=endvalue;var=var+increment)
{
code to be executed
}

Example

<html> <body>

<script type="text/javascript">

for (i = 0; i <= 5; i++)

document.write("The number is " + i)

document.write("<br>")

</script> </body> </html>

Function

A function contains code that will be executed by an event or by a call to the


function.

You may call a function from anywhere within a page (or even from other pages
if the function is embedded in an external .js file).

Functions can be defined both in the <head> and in the <body> section of a
document.

Syntax

function functionname(var1,var2,...,varX)
{
some code
}

Example

<html> <head>
<script type="text/javascript">

function myfunction(txt)

alert(txt)

</script>

</head>

<body>

<form>

<input type="button" onclick="myfunction('Hello')" value="Call function">

</form>

</body> </html>

Function with return Statement

The return statement is used to specify the value that is returned from the
function. So, functions that are going to return a value must use the return
statement.

Example

<html>

<head>

<script type="text/javascript">

function total(numberA,numberB)

return numberA + numberB

</script>

</head>
<body>

<script type="text/javascript">

document.write(total(2,5))

</script>

</body>

</html>

Dialog box

JavaScript supports three important types of dialog boxes. These dialog boxes
can be used to raise and alert, or to get confirmation on any input or to have a
kind of input from the users.

Alert Dialog Box

The alert() method displays an alert box with a specified message and an OK
button.

Syntax

alert(message)

Example

<html>

<head>

<script type="text/javascript">

function display()

alert("Hello! I am an alert box!!");

</script>

</head>

<body>

<input type="button" onclick="display()" value="AlertBox" />


</body>

</html>

Prompt Dialog Box

The prompt dialog box is very useful when you want to pop-up a text box to get
user input

Syntax

prompt(msg,defaultText)

Msg -Required. The message to display in the dialog

boxdefaultText-Optional. The default input value

Example

<html> <head>

<script type="text/javascript">

function dispprompt()

var fname=prompt("Please enter your name:","Your name")

document.getElementById("msg").innerHTML="Greetings " + fname

</script>

</head>

<body>

<input type="button" onclick="dispprompt()" value="prompt box" />

<br /><br />

<div id="msg"></div>

</body>

</html>

Confirmation Dialog Box


A confirmation dialog box is mostly used to take user's consent on any option.
It displays a dialog box with two buttons: OK and Cancel.

Syntax

confirm(message)

Example

<html><head>

<script type="text/javascript">

function display()

confirm("Do you want to continue ?")

</script> </head> <body>

<input type="button" onclick="display()" value="confirm" />

</body> </html>

JavaScript document object model


The DOM (Document Object Model) gives you generic access to most elements,
their styles and attributes in a document.

Each HTML document loaded into a browser window becomes a Document


object.

The Document object provides access to all HTML elements in a page, from
within a script.

The Document object is also part of the Window object, and can be accessed
through the window.document property.

Collection Description

anchors[] Returns an array of all the anchors in the document


forms[] Returns an array of all the forms in the document

images[] Returns an array of all the images in the document

links[] Returns an array of all the links in the document

Anchors

The anchors collection returns an array of all the anchors in the current
document.

Syntax

document.anchors[].property

Example

<html>

<body>

<a name=" java ">java</a><br />

<a name="c++">C++</a><br />

<script type="text/javascript">

document.write(document.anchors.length);</script></p>

</body>

</html>

forms

The forms collection returns an array of all the forms in the current document

Syntax

document.forms[].property

Example

<html>
<body>
<form name="Form1"></form>
<form name="Form2"></form>
<p>Number of forms:
<script type="text/javascript">
document.write(document.forms.length);
</script></p>
</body>
</html>
images

The images collection returns an array of all the images in the current
document.

Syntax

document.images[].property

Example:

<html>
<body>
<img border="0" src="a.jpg" width="150" height="113" />
<img border="0" src="b.jpg" width="152" height="128" />
<p>Number of images:
<script type="text/javascript">
document.write(document.images.length);
</script></p></body> </html>
Links
The links collection returns an array of all the links in the current document.
The links collection counts
<a href=""> tags and <area> tags.
Syntax
document.links[].property
Example
<html>
<body>
<a href="images.html">Images</a>
<p>Number of areas/links:
<script type="text/javascript">
document.write(document.links.length);
</script>
</p>
</body>
</html>
Javascript is an Event Driven Language

Javascript is an event driven language which means your scripts react to events
you set up. Your code isn't running all the time, it simply waits until an event
starts something up! Going into all the Javascript events is beyond the scope.
Window object
The JavaScript Window Object is the highest level JavaScript object which
corresponds to the web browser window.
Using JavaScript, we can manipulate windows in a variety of ways, such as
open one, close it, reload its page, change the attributes of the new window
etc.
Open method
The open() method opens a new browser window.

Syntax
window.open(URL,name,specs)

URL -pecifies the URL of the page to open


name -Specifies the target attribute or the name of the window.
specs -A comma-separated list of items.

Reload window
To reload a window, use this method:

window.location.reload()

Close Window
The closed property returns a Boolean value indicating whether a window has
been closed or not.

Syntax
window.close()

Example Window object

<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript">
function openWin()
{
myWindow=window.open("","","width=200,height=100");
myWindow.document.write("<p>This is 'myWindow'</p>");
}
function closeWin()
{
myWindow.close();
}
function Relo()
{
myWindow.location.reload()
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<input type="button" value="Open 'myWindow'" onclick="openWin()" />
<input type="button" value="Close 'myWindow'" onclick="closeWin()" />
<input type="button" value="Reload" onclick="Relo()" />
</body>
</html>

setInterval() method
The setInterval() method calls a function or evaluates an expression at
specified intervals (in milliseconds).
1000 ms = 1 second.
Syntax
setInterval(―windowname‖,millisec)
Eg:
setTimeout("alert('hi!');", 500);

Other window objects


print()Prints the content of the current window
resizeBy()Resizes the window by the specified pixels
moveBy()Moves a window relative to its current position
moveTo()Moves a window to the specified position

Navigator Object
The navigator object contains information about the browser.

Property Description
appCodeName Returns the code name of the browser
appName Returns the name of the browser
appVersion Returns the version information of the browser
cookieEnabled Determines whether cookies are enabled in the browser

platform Returns for which platform the browser is compiled

userAgent Returns the user-agent header sent by the browser to


the server

The Navigator object is designed to contain information about the version


of Netscape Navigator which is being used. However, it can also be used with
Internet Explorer. All of its properties, which are read-only, contain information
about different aspects of the browser

Navigator Syntax

navigator.appCodeName
navigator.appName
navigator.appVersion
navigator.cookieEnabled
navigator.platform
navigator.userAgent

Example

<html>
<body>
<script type="text/javascript">
document.write("Browser CodeName: " + navigator.appCodeName);
document.write("<br /><br />");
document.write("Browser Name: " + navigator.appName);
document.write("<br /><br />");
document.write("Browser Version: " + navigator.appVersion);
document.write("<br /><br />");
document.write("Cookies Enabled: " + navigator.cookieEnabled);
document.write("<br /><br />");
document.write("Platform: " + navigator.platform);
document.write("<br /><br />");
document.write("User-agent header: " + navigator.userAgent);
</script></body>
</html>
Screen object

The screen object contains information about the visitor's screen.


There is no public standard that applies to the screen object, but all major
browsers support it.
Property Description
availHeight Returns the height of the screen (excluding the Windows
Taskbar)
availWidth Returns the width of the screen (excluding the Windows
Taskbar)
colorDepth Returns the bit depth of the color palette for displaying
images
height Returns the total height of the screen
pixelDepth Returns the color resolution (in bits per pixel) of the screen

width Returns the total width of the screen


Screen Syntax
screen.availHeight
screen.availWidth
screen.colorDepth
screen.height
screen.pixelDepth
screen.width

Example
<HTML>
<BODY>
<script type="text/javascript">
document.write("Available Height: " + screen.availHeight);
document.write("</br>Available Width: " + screen.availWidth);
document.write("</br>Color Depth: " + screen.colorDepth);
document.write("</br>Total Height: " + screen.height);
document.write("</br>Color resolution: " + screen.pixelDepth);
document.write("</br>Total Width: " + screen.width);
</script>
</BODY>
</HTML>

Form Object
form object is a Browser object of JavaScript used to access an HTML form. If a
user wants to access all forms within a document then he can use the forms
array.
The form object is actually a property of document object that is uniquely
created by the browser for each form present in a document.
The properties and methods associated with form object are used to access the
form fields, attributes and controls associated with forms.

Properties of Form Object:


 action  hidden
 elements[]  password
 encoding  radio
 length  reset
 method  select
 name  submit
 target  text
 button checkbox  textarea
 FileUpload
action:
This property is a read or write property and its value is a string.
elements[]:
It contains all fields and controls present in the form. The user can access any
element associated with the form by using the looping concept on the elements
array.
encoding:
This property is a read or write property and its value is a string. This property
helps determine the way of encoding the form data.
length:
This denotes the length of the elements array associated with the form.
method:
This property is a read or write property and its value is a string. This property
helps determine the method by which the form is submitted.
name:
name property of form object denotes the form name.
target:
This property denotes the name of the target window to which form it is to be
submitted into.
button:
The button property of form object denotes the button GUI control placed in the
form.
checkbox:
checkbox property of form object denotes the checkbox field placed in the form.
select:
select property of form object denotes the selection list object placed in the
form.
submit:
submit property of form object denotes the submit button field that is placed in
the form.
text:
text property of form object denotes the text field placed in the form.
textarea:
textarea property of form object denotes the text area field placed in the form.

Example of form objet

<HTML>
<HEAD>
<TITLE>Test Input</TITLE>
</HEAD>
<BODY>
<FORM NAME="myform" ACTION="" METHOD="GET">Enter box: <BR>
<INPUT TYPE="text" NAME="inputbox" VALUE=""><P>
<INPUT TYPE="button" NAME="button" Value="Click" >
<br>
Genter
<INPUT TYPE="radio" NAME="rad" VALUE="radio_button3" onClick=0>
<INPUT TYPE="radio" NAME="rad" VALUE="radio_button4" onClick=0>
<br>Language know<br>
<INPUT TYPE="checkbox" NAME="check2" Value="Check2">Tamil<BR>
<INPUT TYPE="checkbox" NAME="check3" Value="Check3">English<BR>
</br>
This is Text Area
<TEXTAREA NAME="myarea" COLS="40" ROWS="5">
</TEXTAREA>
</br>
List Items
<SELECT NAME="list" SIZE="1">
<OPTION>This is item 1
<OPTION>This is item 2
</SELECT>
</br>
<FORM>
<INPUT TYPE="file" NAME="elementName">
</FORM>
</FORM>
</BODY>
</HTML>
Built-in objects
These built-in objects are available through both the client-side JavaScript and
through LiveWire (Netscape's server-side application).
The three built-in objects are: the String object, the Math object, and
the Date object. Each of these provides great functionality, and together they
give JavaScript its power as a scripting language.
The String Object
The String object is used to manipulate a stored piece of text.
String objects are created with new String().

Syntax
var txt = new String(string);
String Object Methods
Method Description

charAt() Returns the character at the specified index


charCodeAt() Returns the Unicode of the character at the specified index
concat() Joins two or more strings, and returns a copy of the joined strings

fromCharCode() Converts Unicode values to characters


indexOf() Returns the position of the first found occurrence of a specified value in
a string
lastIndexOf() Returns the position of the last found occurrence of a specified value in
a string
match() Searches for a match between a regular expression and a string, and
returns the matches
replace() Searches for a match between a substring (or regular expression) and a
string, and replaces the matched substring with a new substring

search() Searches for a match between a regular expression and a string, and
returns the position of the match
slice() Extracts a part of a string and returns a new string
split() Splits a string into an array of substrings
substr() Extracts the characters from a string, beginning at a specified start
position, and through the specified number of character
substring() Extracts the characters from a string, between two specified indices

toLowerCase() Converts a string to lowercase letters


toUpperCase() Converts a string to uppercase letters
valueOf() Returns the primitive value of a String object
Example

<html>
<body>
<script type="text/javascript">
var str="Hello world!";
document.write("First character: " + str.charAt(0) + "<br />");
document.write("Unicode of first character: " + str.charCodeAt(0) + "<br />");
document.write(str.indexOf("Hello") + "<br />");
document.write(str.toLowerCase()+"<br />");
document.write(str.toUpperCase()+"<br />"); document.write(str.valueOf()
+"<br />")
var str1="Hello ";
var str2="Dharma!";
var str3=" Have a nice day!";
document.write(str1.concat(str2,str3)+ "<br />");
document.write(String.fromCharCode(72,69,76,76,79)+ "<br />");
document.write(str.lastIndexOf("Hello") + "<br />");
var str1="The rain in SPAIN stays mainly in the plain";
var patt1=/ain/gi;
document.write(str1.match(patt1)+ "<br />");
document.write(str.replace("Microsoft", "W3Schools"));
document.write(str.search("W3SCHOOLS"));
document.write(str.substr(3)+"<br />");
document.write(str.substr(3,4));
</script>
</body>
</html>

Date Object

The Date object is used to work with dates and times.


Date objects are created with new Date().
There are four ways of instantiating a date:

var d = new Date();


var d = new Date(milliseconds);
var d = new Date(dateString);
var d = new Date(year, month, day, hours, minutes, seconds, milliseconds);
Method Description

getDate() Returns the day of the month (from 1-31)


getDay() Returns the day of the week (from 0-6)
getFullYear() Returns the year (four digits)
getHours() Returns the hour (from 0-23)
getMilliseconds() Returns the milliseconds (from 0-999)
getMinutes() Returns the minutes (from 0-59)
getMonth() Returns the month (from 0-11)
getSeconds() Returns the seconds (from 0-59)
getTime() Returns the number of milliseconds since midnight Jan 1, 1970
getTimezoneOffset() Returns the time difference between GMT and local time, in
minutes
getUTCDate() Returns the day of the month, according to universal time (from
1-31)
getUTCDay() Returns the day of the week, according to universal time (from
0-6)
getUTCFullYear() Returns the year, according to universal time (four digits)
getUTCHours() Returns the hour, according to universal time (from 0-23)

Example
<html>
<body>
<script type="text/javascript">
var d=new Date()
document.write(d.getDate())
document.write(".")
document.write(d.getMonth() +1)
document.write(".")
document.write(d.getFullYear())
document.write(".")
document.write(d.getHours())
</script>
</body>
</html>

Math Object

The Math object allows you to perform mathematical tasks.


Math is not a constructor. All properties/methods of Math can be called by using
Math as an object, without creating it.

Syntax
var x = Math.PI; // Returns PI
var y = Math.sqrt(16); // Returns the square root of 16

Property Description

E Returns Euler's number (approx. 2.718)


LN2 Returns the natural logarithm of 2 (approx. 0.693)
LN10 Returns the natural logarithm of 10 (approx. 2.302)
LOG2E Returns the base-2 logarithm of E (approx. 1.442)
LOG10E Returns the base-10 logarithm of E (approx. 0.434)
PI Returns PI (approx. 3.14159)
SQRT1_2 Returns the square root of 1/2 (approx. 0.707)
SQRT2 Returns the square root of 2 (approx. 1.414)
abs(x) Returns the absolute value of x
acos(x) Returns the arccosine of x, in radians
asin(x) Returns the arcsine of x, in radians
atan(x) Returns the arctangent of x as a numeric value between -PI/2 and
PI/2 radians
atan2(y,x) Returns the arctangent of the quotient of its arguments
ceil(x) Returns x, rounded upwards to the nearest integer
cos(x) Returns the cosine of x (x is in radians)
exp(x) Returns the value of Ex
floor(x) Returns x, rounded downwards to the nearest integer
log(x) Returns the natural logarithm (base E) of x
max(x,y,z,...,n) Returns the number with the highest value
min(x,y,z,...,n) Returns the number with the lowest value
pow(x,y) Returns the value of x to the power of y
random() Returns a random number between 0 and 1
round(x) Rounds x to the nearest integer
sin(x) Returns the sine of x (x is in radians)
sqrt(x) Returns the square root of x
tan(x) Returns the tangent of an angle

Example

<html>
<body>
<script type="text/javascript">
document.write("abs"+Math.abs(7.25) + "<br />");
document.write("acos"+Math.acos(0.64) + "<br />")
document.write("asin"+Math.asin(0.64) + "<br />")
document.write("atan2"+Math.atan2(8,4)+ "<br />");
document.write("ceil"+Math.ceil(0.60) + "<br />");
document.write("cos"+Math.cos(3) + "<br />");
document.write("floor"+Math.floor(0.60) + "<br />")
document.write("log"+Math.log(1) + "<br />");
document.write("max"+Math.max(-5,10) + "<br />");
document.write("pow"+Math.pow(0,0) + "<br />");
document.write("rount"+Math.round(0.60) + "<br />");
document.write("random"+Math.random() + "<br />");
document.write("sin"+Math.sin(3) + "<br />");
document.write("sqrt"+Math.sqrt(9) + "<br />");
</script>
</body>
</html>

User Defined Object

All user-defined objects and built-in objects are descendants of an object called
Object. .
The new Operator:
The new operator is used to create an instance of an object. To create an
object, the new operator is followed by the constructor method.

Example
<html>
<head>
<title>User-defined objects</title>
<script type="text/javascript">
var book = new Object(); // Create the object
book.subject = "C++"; // Assign properties to the object
book.author = "Balagurusami";
</script>
</head>
<body>
<script type="text/javascript">
document.write("Book name is : " + book.subject + "<br>");
document.write("Book author is : " + book.author + "<br>");
</script>
</body>
</html>

cookies
Cookies are small amounts of data stored by the web browser. They allow you
to store particular information about a user and retrieve it every time they visit
your pages.Each user has their own unique set of cookies.

syntax

set.cookie = "name=value; expires=date; path=path; domain=domain;


secure";

name=value This sets both the cookie's name and its value.
Ex : username=AAAA
expires=date This optional value sets the date that the cookie will expire on.
The date should be in the format returned by the the toGMTString() method of
the Date object – Greenwith Mean Time(DD-MM-YY)
expires=13/06/2003 00:00:00
domain=domain This optional value specifies a domain within which the
cookie applies. Only websites in this domain will be able to retrieve the cookie
Ex : domain=google.com

secure : This optional flag indicates that the browser should use SSL when
sending the cookie to the server. This flag is rarely used.

JavaScript escape() function to encode the valuebefore storing it in the


cookie. If you do this, you will also have to use the
corresponding unescape() function when you read the cookie value.

Example

<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript">
<!--
function WriteCookie()
{
if( document.myform.customer.value == "" )
{
alert("Enter some value!");
return;
}
cookievalue= escape(document.myform.customer.value) + ";";
document.cookie="name=" + cookievalue;
alert("Setting Cookies : " + "name=" + cookievalue );
}
//-->
</script>
</head>
<body>
<form name="myform" action="">
Enter name: <input type="text" name="customer"/>
<input type="button" value="Set Cookie" onclick="WriteCookie();"/>
</form>
</body>
</html>
Asp.Net – Introduction
Asp.net is the new offering for Web developers form the Microsoft. It is not
simply the next generation of ASP. Because it has evolved from Asp, Asp.Net
looks very similar to its predecessor. But concepts like web forms, Web
Services, or server controls gives Asp.Net the power to build real Web
application.

What is ASP.NET?

 ASP.NET provides services to allow the creation, deployment, and


execution of Web Applications and Web Services
 Like ASP, ASP.NET is a server-side technology
 Web Applications are built using Web Forms. ASP.NET comes with built-in
Web Forms controls, which are responsible for generating the user
interface. They mirror typical HTML widgets like text boxes or buttons. If
these controls do not fit your needs, you are free to create your own user
controls.
 Web Forms are designed to make building web-based applications as easy
as building Visual Basic applications

Features of ASP.NET

 Separation of Code from HTML


To make a clean sweep, with ASP.NET you have the ability to completely
separate layout and business logic. This makes it much easier for teams
of programmers and designers to collaborate efficiently. This makes it
much easier for teams of programmers and designers to collaborate
efficiently.
 Support for compiled languages
developer can use VB.NET and access features such as strong typing and
object-oriented programming. Using compiled languages also means that
ASP.NET pages do not suffer the performance penalties associated with
interpreted code. ASP.NET pages are precompiled to byte-code and Just
In Time (JIT) compiled when first requested. Subsequent requests are
directed to the fully compiled code, which is cached until the source
changes.
 Use services provided by the .NET Framework
The .NET Framework provides class libraries that can be used by your
application. Some of the key classes help you with input/output, access to
operating system services, data access, or even debugging. We will go
into more detail on some of them in this module.
 Graphical Development Environment
Visual Studio .NET provides a very rich development environment for Web
developers. You can drag and drop controls and set properties the way
you do in Visual Basic 6. And you have full IntelliSense support, not only
for your code, but also for HTML and XML.
 State management
To refer to the problems mentioned before, ASP.NET provides solutions
for session and application state management. State information can, for
example, be kept in memory or stored in a database. It can be shared
across Web farms, and state information can be recovered, even if the
server fails or the connection breaks down
 Update files while the server is running
Components of your application can be updated while the server is online
and clients are connected. The Framework will use the new files as soon
as they are copied to the application. Removed or old files that are still in
use are kept in memory until the clients have finished.
 XML-Based Configuration Files
Configuration settings in ASP.NET are stored in XML files that you can
easily read and edit. You can also easily copy these to another server,
along with the other files that comprise your application.

ASP.NET Page Life Cycle Overview

When an ASP.NET page runs, the page goes through a life cycle in which it
performs a series of processing steps. These include initialization, instantiating
controls, restoring and maintaining state, running event handler code, and rendering.
It is important for you to understand the page life cycle so that you can write code at
the appropriate life-cycle stage for the effect you intend. Additionally, if you develop
custom controls, you must be familiar with the page life cycle in order to correctly
initialize controls, populate control properties with view-state data, and run any control
behavior code. (The life cycle of a control is based on the page life cycle, but the page
raises more events for a control than are available for an ASP.NET page alone.)

General Page Life-cycle Stages

In general terms, the page goes through the stages outlined in the following table. In
addition to the page life-cycle stages, there are application stages that occur before and after a
request but are not specific to a page.

Stage Description

Page request The page request occurs before the page life cycle begins. When the page is
requested by a user, ASP.NET determines whether the page needs to be parsed
and compiled (therefore beginning the life of a page), or whether a cached
version of the page can be sent in response without running the page.
Start In the start step, page properties such as Request and Response are set. At this
stage, the page also determines whether the request is a postback or a new
request and sets the IsPostBack property. Additionally, during the start step,
the page's UICulture property is set.
Page During page initialization, controls on the page are available and each control's
initialization UniqueID property is set. Any themes are also applied to the page. If the
current request is a postback, the postback data has not yet been loaded and
control property values have not been restored to the values from view state.
Load During load, if the current request is a postback, control properties are loaded
with information recovered from view state and control state.
Validation During validation, the Validate method of all validator controls is called, which
sets the IsValid property of individual validator controls and of the page.
Postback If the request is a postback, any event handlers are called.
event
handling
Rendering Before rendering, view state is saved for the page and all controls. During the
rendering phase, the page calls the Render method for each control, providing a
text writer that writes its output to the OutputStream of the page's Response
property.
Unload Unload is called after the page has been fully rendered, sent to the client, and is
ready to be discarded. At this point, page properties such as Response and
Request are unloaded and any cleanup is performed.

Life-cycle Events

Within each stage of the life cycle of a page, the page raises events that you can handle to run
your own code. For control events, you bind the event handler to the event, either declaratively
using attributes such as onclick, or in code.

Pages also support automatic event wire-up, meaning that ASP.NET looks for methods with
particular names and automatically runs those methods when certain events are raised. If the
AutoEventWireup attribute of the @ Page directive is set to true (or if it is not defined, since
by default it is true), page events are automatically bound to methods that use the naming
convention of Page_event, such as Page_Load and Page_Init

The following table lists the page life-cycle events that you will use most frequently.
There are more events than those listed; however, they are not used for most page processing
scenarios. Instead, they are primarily used by server controls on the ASP.NET Web page to
initialize and render themselves. If you want to write your own ASP.NET server controls, you
need to understand more about these stages.

Page Event Typical Use

PreInit Use this event for the following:


Check the IsPostBack property to determine whether this is the first
time the page is being processed.
Create or re-create dynamic controls.
Set a master page dynamically.
Set the Theme property dynamically.
Read or set profile property values.

Note
If the request is a postback, the values of the controls have not yet been
restored from view state. If you set a control property at this stage, its
value might be overwritten in the next event.

Init Raised after all controls have been initialized and any skin settings have
been applied. Use this event to read or initialize control properties.
InitComplete Raised by the Page object. Use this event for processing tasks that require
all initialization be complete.
PreLoad Use this event if you need to perform processing on your page or control
before the Load event.
After the Page raises this event, it loads view state for itself and all
controls, and then processes any postback data included with the Request
instance.
Load The Page calls the OnLoad event method on the Page, then recursively
does the same for each child control, which does the same for each of its
child controls until the page and all controls are loaded.
Use the OnLoad event method to set properties in controls and establish
database connections.
Control events Use these events to handle specific control events, such as a Button
control's Click event or a TextBox control's TextChanged event.

Note

In a postback request, if the page contains validator controls, check the


IsValid property of the Page and of individual validation controls before
performing any processing.

LoadComplete Use this event for tasks that require that all other controls on the page be
loaded.
PreRender Before this event occurs:
The Page object calls EnsureChildControls for each control and for the
page.
Each data bound control whose DataSourceID property is set calls its
DataBind method. For more information, see Data Binding Events for
Data-Bound Controls below.
The PreRender event occurs for each control on the page. Use the
event to make final changes to the contents of the page or its controls.
SaveStateComplete Before this event occurs, ViewState has been saved for the page and for all
controls. Any changes to the page or controls at this point will be ignored.
Use this event perform tasks that require view state to be saved, but that
do not make any changes to controls.
Render This is not an event; instead, at this stage of processing, the Page object
calls this method on each control. All ASP.NET Web server controls have a
Render method that writes out the control's markup that is sent to the
browser.
If you create a custom control, you typically override this method to output
the control's markup. However, if your custom control incorporates only
standard ASP.NET Web server controls and no custom markup, you do not
need to override the Render method.
A user control (an .ascx file) automatically incorporates rendering, so you
do not need to explicitly render the control in code.
Unload This event occurs for each control and then for the page. In controls, use
this event to do final cleanup for specific controls, such as closing control-
specific database connections.
For the page itself, use this event to do final cleanup work, such as closing
open files and database connections, or finishing up logging or other
request-specific tasks.

Note

During the unload stage, the page and its controls have been rendered,
so you cannot make further changes to the response stream. If you
attempt to call a method such as the Response.Write method, the page
will throw an exception.

Structure of Asp.Net
Directives

You can use directives to specify optional settings used by the page compiler
when processing ASP.NET files. For each directive you can set different
attributes. One example is the language directive at the beginning of a page
defining the default programming language.

Code Declaration Blocks

Code declaration blocks are lines of code enclosed in <script> tags. They contain the
runat=server attribute, which tells ASP.NET that these controls can be accessed on the server
and on the client. Optionally you can specify the language for the block. The code block itself
consists of the definition of member variables and methods.

Code Render Blocks

Render blocks contain inline code or inline expressions enclosed by the character sequences
shown here. The language used inside those blocks could be specified through a directive like
the one shown before.

HTML Control Syntax

You can declare several standard HTML elements as HTML server controls. Use the element as
you are familiar with in HTML and add the attribute runat=server. This causes the HTML
element to be treated as a server control. It is now programmatically accessible by using a
unique ID. HTML server controls must reside within a <form> section that also has the attribute
runat=server.

Custom Control Syntax


There are two different kinds of custom controls. On the one hand there are the controls that
ship with .NET, and on the other hand you can create your own custom controls. Using custom
server controls is the best way to encapsulate common programmatic functionality.Just specify
elements as you did with HTML elements, but add a tag prefix, which is an alias for the fully
qualified namespace of the control. Again you must include the runat=server attribute. If you
want to get programmatic access to the control, just add an Id attribute.You can include
properties for each server control to characterize its behavior. For example, you can set the
maximum length of a TextBox. Those properties might have sub properties; you know this
principle from HTML. Now you have the ability to specify, for example, the size and type of the
font you use .The last attribute is dedicated to event binding. This can be used to bind the
control to a specific event

Data Binding Expression

You can create bindings between server controls and data sources. The data binding expression
is enclosed by the character sequences <%# and %>. The data-binding model provided by
ASP.NET is hierarchical. That means you can create bindings between server control properties
and superior data sources.

Server-side Object Tags

If you need to create an instance of an object on the server, use server-side object tags. When
the page is compiled, an instance of the specified object is created. To specify the object use
the identifier attribute. You can declare .NET objects using class as the identifier, and COM
objects using either progid or classid.

Server-side Include Directives

With server-side include directives you can include raw contents of a file anywhere in your
ASP.NET file. Specify the type of the path to filename with the path type attribute. Use either
File, when specifying a relative path, or Virtual, when using a full virtual path.

Server-side Comments

To prevent server code from executing, use these character sequences to comment it out. You
can comment out full blocks - not just single lines.

Asp.Net – Framework
ASP.NET is based on the fundamental architecture of .NET Framework. Visual studio provides a
uniform way to combine the various features of this Architecture. Architecture is explained form
bottom to top in the following discussion.
At the bottom of the Architecture is Common Language Runtime. NET framework common
language runtime resides on top of the operating system services. The common language
runtime loads and executes code that targets the runtime. This code is therefore called
managed code. The runtime gives you, for example, the ability for cross-language integration.

1..NET Framework provides a rich set of class libraries. These include base classes, like
networking and input/output classes, a data class library for data access, and classes for use by
programming tools, such as debugging services. All of them are brought together by the
Services Framework, which sits on top of the common language runtime.

2. ADO.NET is Microsoft‘s ActiveX Data Object (ADO) model for the .NET Framework.
ADO.NET is not simply the migration of the popular ADO model to the managed environment
but a completely new paradigm for data access and manipulation.

ADO.NET is intended specifically for developing web applications. This is evident from its two
major design principles:

>>Disconnected Datasets—In ADO.NET, almost all data manipulation is done outside the
context of an open database connection.
>>Effortless Data Exchange with XML—Datasets can converse in the universal data format of
the Web, namely XML.

3. The 4th layer of the framework consists of the Windows application model and, in
parallel, the Web application model.
The Web application model-in the slide presented as ASP.NET-includes Web Forms and Web
Services. ASP.NET comes with built-in Web Forms controls, which are responsible for
generating the user interface. They mirror typical HTML widgets like text boxes or buttons. If
these controls do not fit your needs, you are free to create your own user controls. Web
Services brings you a model to bind different applications over the Internet. This model is
based on existing infrastructure and applications and is therefore standard-based, simple, and
adaptable. Web Services are software solutions delivered via Internet to any device. Today,
that means Web browsers on computers, for the most part, but the device-agnostic design of
.NET will eliminate this limitation.

4. One of the obvious themes of .NET is unification and interoperability between various
programming languages. In order to achieve this; certain rules must be laid and all the
languages must follow these rules. In other words we can not have languages running
around creating their own extensions and their own fancy new data types. CLS is the
collection of the rules and constraints that every language (that seeks to achieve .NET
compatibility) must follow.

5.The CLR and the .NET Frameworks in general, however, are designed in such a way that code
written in one language can not only seamlessly be used by another language. Hence ASP.NET
can be programmed in any of the .NET compatible language whether it is VB.NET, C#, Managed
C++ or JScript.NET.
Asp.Net – Controls

Types of Controls:

1. Web Controls

2. Html Controls

3. Validation Controls

4. User Controls

1. Web Controls:

Web Controls provide a more consistent object model and a higher level of abstraction than
HtmlControls
– Most HTML elements can also be represented as Web Controls on the server
– Web Control versions typically have a more consistent interface (background color is always
Back Color property whereas in HTML it may be a style attribute (span) or a property (table) )
– Web Controls also provide higher-level controls with more functionality than primitive HTML
elements (like the Calendar control)
– Web Controls may render themselves differently based on client browser capabilities

Hierarchy of Web controls

Web controls

AdRotator Listbutton Image

DataGrid RadioButtonList ImageButton

DataList CheckBoxList Label

Button DropDownList

Calendar ListBox

CheckBox Panel

RadioButton Table

HyperLink TableRow

Textbox TableCell

A sample ASP.NET Page written with Webcontrols

<%@ Page Language="C#" %>


<html>

<body>

<form runat="Server">

<asp:RadioButton Text="Click me !" runat="server" ID="rb"/></br>

<asp:CheckBox Text="Click me !" runat="server" ID="ck"/></br>

<asp:Button Text="Click me !" runat="server" ID="btn"/></br>

</form>

</body>

</html>

1.HTML Controls:

HtmlControls are server-side representations of standard HTML elements

– Any HTML element in an ASPX page marked with the runat=server attribute will become
an HTML control on the server

– All derive from HtmlControl class

– HTML elements with no distinguished server-side functionality (like div, span, etc.) are all
represented as HtmlGenericControl instances
Html Controls

Html Image HtmlForm

HtmlInputFile HtmlButton

HtmlInputHidden HtmlSelect

HtmlInputRadioButton HtmlTable

HtmlInputText HtmlTableCell

HtmlInputButton HtmlTableRow

HtmlInputCheckButton HtmlTextArea

HtmlInputImage HtmlAnchor

A sample Code for HtmlControls

HtmlAnchor
The Anchor control to programmatically control an <a> HTML element. The <a> HTML
element allows you to create a hyperlink that allows you to move to another location on the
page or to another Web page. The HtmlAnchor control must be well formed with an opening
and closing tag.

<a id="anchor1" runat="server">

Remember to embed the HtmlAnchor control inside the opening and closing tags of
an HtmlForm control.

HtmlButton Button control to program against the HTML <button> element. You can provide
custom code for the ServerClick event of the HtmlButtoncontrol to specify the action
performed when the control is clicked.

The HtmlButton control renders JavaScript to the client browser. The client browser must
have JavaScript enabled for this control to function properly
Declare an HtmlButton control on your Web Forms pag

<button runat="server"> </button>

HtmlForm
Form control to program against the HTML <form> element. To take advantage of the
postback services, all Web Forms controls, whether HTML, Web, pagelet, or custom, must be
nested between well-formed opening and closing tags of the HtmlForm control. If the tags are
not closed properly, ASP.NET will not recognize the element. The element will either be ignored
or a compilation error will occur, depending on how the element is formed.

<form id="programmaticID" method=POST|GET action="srcpageURL" runat="server" >


Other controls, input forms, and so on.
</form>

HtmlTable

Table control to program against the HTML <table> element. An HtmlTable control is made
up of rows (represented by HtmlTableRowobjects) stored in the Rows collection of a table. Each
row is made up of cells (represented by HtmlTableCell objects) stored in the Cells collection of a
row.

To create a table, first declare an HtmlTable control in the form on your page. Next,
place HtmlTableRow objects between the opening and closing tags of the HtmlTable control,
one for each row you want in your table. Once the rows of the table are defined,
declare HtmlTableCell objects between the opening and closing tags of
each HtmlTableRow object to create the cells of the row.

<table id="programmaticID" align=left | center | right bgcolor="bgcolor"


border="borderwidthinpixels" bordercolor="bordercolor"
cellpadding="spacingwithincellsinpixels" cellspacing="spacingbetweencellsinpixels"
height="tableheight" rows="collectionofrows" width="tablewidth"
runat="server" >

<tr>
<td></td>
</tr>
</table>

HtmlInputFile
File control to program against the HTML <input type=file> element. You can use
the HtmlInputFile control to easily design a page that allows users to upload binary or text
files from a browser to a directory that you designate on your Web server. File upload is
enabled in all HTML 3.2 and later Web browsers.

<input type=file id="programmaticID" accept="MIMEencodings"


maxlength="maxfilepathlength" size="widthoffilepathtextbox" postedfile="uploadedfile"
runat="server" >

Web Server Controls


The following topics cover the ASP.NET syntax that you use when creating a Web server control
in a text or HTML editor. These topics include the properties that are shared among all Web
server controls, as well as specific properties for each control.

Label control
Used to display text in a set location on the page. Unlike static text, you can customize the
displayed text by setting the Text property.

<asp:Label id="Label1" Text="label" runat="server"/>

Button control

The Button control allows you to create a push button on the Web Forms page. There are two
types of buttons that can be created. You can create either a submit button or
a command button.

<asp:Button id="SubmitButton" Text="Submit" OnClick="SubmitBtn_Click" runat="server"/>

CheckBox control
The CheckBox control creates a check box on the Web Forms page that allows the user to
switch between a true or false state. You can specify the caption to display in the control by
setting the Text property. The caption can appear either on the right or left of the check box.
Set the TextAlignproperty to specify the side that the caption appears on.

<asp:CheckBox id=Check1 runat="server" Text="CheckBox 1" AutoPostBack="True"/>

HyperLink control
Use the HyperLink control to create a link that moves you to another page or location on the
page. Specify the page or location to link to by using theNavigateUrl property. The link can
either be displayed as text or an image. To display text, either set the Text property or simply
place the text between the opening and closing tags of the HyperLink control. To display an
image, set the ImageUrl property.

<asp:HyperLink id="hyperLink1" ImageUrl="images\pict.jpg"


NavigateUrl="http://www.microsoft.com" Text="Microsoft Official Site"
Target="_new" runat="server"/>
_blank Displays the linked page in a new window without frames.
_parent Displays the linked page in the immediate frameset parent.
_self Displays the linked page in the frame with focus.
_top Displays the linked page in a the full window without frames.

Image control
Use the Image control to display an image on the Web Forms page. Setting
the ImageUrl property specifies the path to the displayed image. You can specify the text
to display in place of the image when the image is not available by setting
the AlternateText property. The ImageAlign property specifies the alignment of the image in
relation to other elements on the Web Forms page.

This control only displays an image. If you want the image to behave like a button or need to
determine the coordinates where the mouse pointer is clicked on the image, use
the ImageButton control.

<asp:Image id="image1" runat="server" AlternateText="Image Description"


ImageAlign="left" ImageUrl="pict.jpg"/>

RadioButton

The RadioButton server control creates a radio button on the Web Forms page. Specify the
text to display in the control by setting Text property. The text can appear either on the left or
the right of the radio button. Set TextAlign property to control the side that the text appears
on. You can group multiple radio buttons together if you specify the same GroupName for
each RadioButton control. Grouping radio buttons together will only allow a mutually exclusive
selection from the group.

<asp:RadioButton id="RadioButton1" AutoPostBack="True|False" Checked="True|False"


GroupName="GroupName" Text="label" TextAlign="Right|Left"
OnCheckedChanged="OnCheckedChangedMethod" runat="server"/>

TextBox server control

The TextBox server control is an input control that lets the user enter text. By default,
the TextMode property is set to SingleLine, which creates a text box with only one line. You
can also set the property to MultiLine or Password. MultiLine creates a text box with more
than one line. Password creates a single-line text box that masks the value entered by the
user. The display width of the text box is determined by its Columns property. If the text box
is a multiline text box, the display height is determined by theRows property.

<asp:TextBox ID="TextBox1" runat="server" TextMode="SingleLine | MultiLine |


Password" ></asp:TextBox>

CheckBoxList control
The CheckBoxList control creates a multiselection check box group that can be dynamically
generated using data binding. To specify items that you want to appear in
the CheckBoxList control, place a ListItem element for each entry between the opening and
closing tags of the CheckBoxList control.

<asp:CheckBoxList id="Check1" RepeatLayout="flow" runat="server">


<asp:ListItem>Item 1</asp:ListItem>
<asp:ListItem>Item 2</asp:ListItem>
</asp:CheckBoxList>

DropDownList control

Use the DropDownList control to create a single selection drop-down list control. You can
control the appearance of the DropDownList control by setting
the BorderColor, BorderStyle, and BorderWidth properties.

To specify the items that appear in the DropDownList control, place a ListItem element for
each entry between the opening and closing tags of theDropDownList control.

Example
<asp:RadioButtonList ID="RadioButtonList1" runat="server">
<asp:ListItem Text="a" Value="1"></asp:ListItem>
<asp:ListItem Text="b" Value="2"></asp:ListItem
</asp:RadioButtonList>

ImageButton control

Use the ImageButton control to display an image that responds to mouse clicks. Specify the
image to display in the control by setting the ImageUrlproperty.

Both the Click and Command events are raised when the ImageButton control is clicked.

<asp:ImageButton id="ImageButton1" ImageUrl="string" Command="Command"


CommandArgument="CommandArgument" CausesValidation="true | false"
OnClick="OnClickMethod" runat="server"/>

the ListBox control

Use the ListBox control to create a list control that allows single or multiple item selection. Use
the Rows property to specify the height of the control. To enable multiple item selection, set
the SelectionMode property to ListSelectionMode.Multiple.

To specify the items that you want to appear in the ListBox control, place a ListItem element
for each entry between the opening and closing tags of theListBox control.

<asp:ListBox ID="ListBox1" runat="server">


<asp:ListItem Value="2">b</asp:ListItem>
<asp:ListItem Value="1">a</asp:ListItem>
</asp:ListBox>&nbsp;</div>

The DataGrid control


The DataGrid control renders a tabular, data-bound grid. This control allows you to define
various types of columns to control the layout of the cell contents of the grid (bound columns,
template columns) and add specific functionality (such as edit button columns, hyperlink
columns, and so on). The control also supports a variety of options for paging through data.
The DataGrid control displays the fields of a data source as columns in a table. Each row in
the DataGrid control represents a record in the data source. The DataGrid control supports
selection, editing, deleting, paging, and sorting.

Syntex
<asp:DataGrid ID="DataGrid1" runat="server"> </asp:DataGrid>

The order that the columns are displayed in the DataGrid control is controlled by the order
that the columns appear in the Columnscollection. Although you can programmatically change
the order of the columns by manipulating the Columns collection, it is easier to list the
columns in the desired display order.
Explicitly declared columns can be used in conjunction with automatically generated columns.
When using both, explicitly declared columns will be rendered first, followed by the
automatically generated columns. Automatically generated columns are not added to
theColumns collection.

Example

<%@ Import Namespace="System.Data.SqlClient" %>

<Script Runat="Server">

Sub Page_Load

Dim conNorthwind As SqlConnection

Dim cmdSelect As SqlCommand

conNorthwind=New SqlConnection(
"Server=localhost;UID=sa;PWD=secret;Database=Northwind" )

cmdSelect = New SqlCommand( "Select * From Employees", conNorthwind )

conNorthwind.Open()

dgrdEmployees.DataSource = cmdSelect.ExecuteReader()

dgrdEmployees.DataBind()

conNorthwind.Close()

End Sub

</Script>

<html><head><title>ExpertDataGrid.aspx</title></head>

<body><asp:DataGrid ID="dgrdEmployees" Runat="Server" /></body></html>


Repeater control

Use the Repeater control to create a basic templated data-bound list.


The Repeater control has no built-in layout or styles; you must explicitly
declare all HTML layout, formatting, and style tags within the control's
templates.

The Repeater control is different from other data list controls in that it allows
you to place HTML fragments in its templates. This allows you to create a
complex HTML structure, such as a table. For example, to create a list within an
HTML table, start the table by placing the <table> tag in
theHeaderTemplate. Next, create the rows and columns of the table by
placing <tr> tags, <td> tags, and data-bound items in the ItemTemplate. If
you want a different appearance for alternating items in the table, create
an AlternatingItemTemplate with the same contents as the ItemTemplate,
except with a different style specified. Finally, complete the table by placing
the </table> tag in the FooterTemplate.

<asp:Repeater id="Repeater1"
DataSource="<% databindingexpression %>"
runat=server>

<HeaderTemplate>
Header template HTML
</HeaderTemplate>
<ItemTemplate>
Item template HTML
</ItemTemplate>
<AlternatingItemTemplate>
Alternating item template HTML
</AlternatingItemTemplate>
<SeparatorTemplate>
Separator template HTML
</SeparatorTemplate>
<FooterTemplate>
Footer template HTML
</FooterTemplate>

<asp:Repeater>
Cookies Overview

Cookies provide a means in Web applications to store user-specific information. For example,
when a user visits your site, you can use cookies to store user preferences or other information.
When the user visits your Web site another time, the application can retrieve the information it
stored earlier.

What Are Cookies?

A cookie is a small bit of text that accompanies requests and pages as they go between the
Web server and browser. The cookie contains information the Web application can read
whenever the user visits the site.

For example, if a user requests a page from your site and your application sends not just a
page, but also a cookie containing the date and time, when the user's browser gets the page,
the browser also gets the cookie, which it stores in a folder on the user's hard disk.

Later, if user requests a page from your site again, when the user enters the URL the browser
looks on the local hard disk for a cookie associated with the URL. If the cookie exists, the
browser sends the cookie to your site along with the page request. Your application can then
determine the date and time that the user last visited the site. You might use the information to
display a message to the user or check an expiration date.

Cookies are associated with a Web site, not with a specific page, so the browser and server will
exchange cookie information no matter what page the user requests from your site. As the user
visits different sites, each site might send a cookie to the user's browser as well; the browser
stores all the cookies separately.

Cookies help Web sites store information about visitors. More generally, cookies are one way of
maintaining continuity in a Web application—that is, of performing state management. Except
for the brief time when they are actually exchanging information, the browser and Web server
are disconnected. Each request a user makes to a Web server is treated independently of any
other request. Many times, however, it's useful for the Web server to recognize users when
they request a page. For example, the Web server on a shopping site keeps track of individual
shoppers so the site can manage shopping carts and other user-specific information. A cookie
therefore acts as a kind of calling card, presenting pertinent identification that helps an
application know how to proceed.

Cookies are used for many purposes, all relating to helping the Web site remember users. For
example, a site conducting a poll might use a cookie simply as a Boolean value to indicate
whether a user's browser has already participated in voting so that the user cannot vote twice.
A site that asks a user to log on might use a cookie to record that the user already logged on so
that the user does not have to keep entering credentials.

You can add cookies to the Cookies collection in a number of ways. The following example
shows two methods to write cookies:
Visual Basic

Response.Cookies("userName").Value = "patrick"
Response.Cookies("userName").Expires = DateTime.Now.AddDays(1)

Dim aCookie As New HttpCookie("lastVisit")


aCookie.Value = DateTime.Now.ToString()
aCookie.Expires = DateTime.Now.AddDays(1)
Response.Cookies.Add(aCookie)

ADO .NET
Most applications need data access at one point of time making it a crucial component when
working with applications. Data access is making the application interact with a database,
where all the data is stored. Different applications have different requirements for database
access. ASP.NET uses ADO .NET (Active X Data Object) as it's data access and manipulation
protocol which also enables us to work with data on the Internet.

Advantages of ADO.Net

 ADO.NET Does Not Depend On Continuously Live Connections


 Database Interactions Are Performed Using Data Commands
 Data Can Be Cached in Datasets
 Datasets Are Independent of Data Sources
 Data Is Persisted as XML
 Schemas Define Data Structures

OLEDB

The dot net framework data provider for OLEDB provides connectivity with the OLEDB
supported database management systems. It is the recommended middle tier for the SQL
Server 6.5 or earlier and Microsoft Access Database. It is a general data provider. You can also
use it to connect with the SQL Server or Oracle Database Management Systems. The classes for
this provider are present in the System.Data.OleDBClient namespace.

ADO.NET - Data Architecture


Data Access in ADO.NET relies on two components: DataSet and Data Provider.

Dataset

The dataset is a disconnected, in-memory representation of data. It can be considered as a


local copy of the relevant portions of the database. The DataSet is persisted in memory and the
data in it can be manipulated and updated independent of the database. When the use of this
DataSet is finished, changes can be made back to the central database for updating. The data
in DataSet can be loaded from any valid data source like Microsoft SQL server database, an
Oracle database or from a Microsoft Access database.

Data Provider
The Data Provider is responsible for providing and maintaining the connection to the database.
A DataProvider is a set of related components that work together to provide data in an efficient
and performance driven manner. The .NET Framework currently comes with two
DataProviders: the SQL Data Provider which is designed only to work with Microsoft's SQL
Server 7.0 or later and the OleDb DataProvider which allows us to connect to other types of
databases like Access and Oracle. Each DataProvider consists of the following component
classes:

The Connection object which provides a connection to the database


The Command object which is used to execute a command
The DataReader object which provides a forward-only, read only, connected recordset
The DataAdapter object which populates a disconnected DataSet with data and performs update

Data access with ADO.NET can be summarized as follows:

A connection object establishes the connection for the application with the database. The
command object provides direct execution of the command to the database. If the command
returns more than a single value, the command object returns a DataReader to provide the
data. Alternatively, the DataAdapter can be used to fill the Dataset object. The database can be
updated using the command object or the DataAdapter.

Component classes that make up the Data Providers


The Connection Object

The Connection object creates the connection to the database. Microsoft Visual Studio .NET
provides two types of Connection classes: the SqlConnection object, which is designed
specifically to connect to Microsoft SQL Server 7.0 or later, and the OleDbConnection object,
which can provide connections to a wide range of database types like Microsoft Access and
Oracle. The Connection object contains all of the information required to open a connection to
the database.

The Command Object

The Command object is represented by two corresponding classes: SqlCommand and


OleDbCommand. Command objects are used to execute commands to a database across a data
connection. The Command objects can be used to execute stored procedures on the database,
SQL commands, or return complete tables directly. Command objects provide three methods
that are used to execute commands on the database:

ExecuteNonQuery: Executes commands that have no return values such as INSERT, UPDATE or
DELETE
ExecuteScalar: Returns a single value from a database query
ExecuteReader: Returns a result set by way of a DataReader object

The DataReader Object

The DataReader object provides a forward-only, read-only, connected stream recordset from a
database. Unlike other components of the Data Provider, DataReader objects cannot be directly
instantiated. Rather, the DataReader is returned as the result of the Command object's
ExecuteReader method. The SqlCommand.ExecuteReader method returns a SqlDataReader
object, and the OleDbCommand.ExecuteReader method returns an OleDbDataReader object.
The DataReader can provide rows of data directly to application logic when you do not need to
keep the data cached in memory. Because only one row is in memory at a time, the
DataReader provides the lowest overhead in terms of system performance but requires the
exclusive use of an open Connection object for the lifetime of the DataReader.

The DataAdapter Object

The DataAdapter is the class at the core of ADO .NET's disconnected data access. It is
essentially the middleman facilitating all communication between the database and a DataSet.
The DataAdapter is used either to fill a DataTable or DataSet with data from the database with
it's Fill method. After the memory-resident data has been manipulated, the DataAdapter can
commit the changes to the database by calling the Update method. The DataAdapter provides
four properties that represent database commands:

SelectCommand
InsertCommand
DeleteCommand
UpdateCommand

When the Update method is called, changes in the DataSet are copied back to the database and
the appropriate InsertCommand, DeleteCommand, or UpdateCommand is executed.
Internet Information Services (IIS) - formerly called Internet
Information Server - is a web server application and set of feature extension modules
created by Microsoft for use with Microsoft Windows. It is the world's second most
popular web server in terms of overall websites behind the industry leader Apache
HTTP Server.

Internet Information Services is used to make your computer a web server. If we want
to have a web server for developing dynamic website or want to publish website on our
own server then we install the IIS. IIS is used on windows plate form.

IIS takes request from user and executes the required files and sends result back to
the user. IIS server also provides the services of SMTP (Simple Mail Transport
Protocol). We can send emails using SMTP. FrontPage server extensions are also the
part of IIS

IIS Features

IIS 7 is built on a modular architecture. Modules, also called extensions, can be added
or removed individually so that only modules required for specific functionality have to
be installed. IIS 7 includes native modules as part of the full installation. These
modules are individual features that the server uses to process requests and include
the following:

HTTP modules - Used to perform tasks specific to HTTP in the request-processing


pipeline, such as responding to information and inquiries sent in client headers,
returning HTTP errors, and redirecting requests.
Security modules - Used to perform tasks related to security in the request-processing
pipeline, such as specifying authentication schemes, performing URL authorization, and
filtering requests.

Content modules - Used to perform tasks related to content in the request-processing


pipeline, such as processing requests for static files, returning a default page when a
client does not specify a resource in a request, and listing the contents of a directory.

Compression modules - Used to perform tasks related to compression in the request-


processing pipeline, such as compressing responses, applying Gzip compression
transfer coding to responses, and performing pre-compression of static content.

Caching modules - Used to perform tasks related to caching in the request-processing


pipeline, such as storing processed information in memory on the server and using
cached content in subsequent requests for the same resource.

Logging and Diagnostics modules - Used to perform tasks related to logging and
diagnostics in the request-processing pipeline, such as passing information and
processing status to HTTP.sys for logging, reporting events, and tracking requests
currently executing in worker

E-mail [Electronic mail]

E-mail is one of the most common and reliable methods of communication for both personal
and business purposes. It also plays an important role in each and every Web site. This role
will be in the type of automated e-mails from the server after posting information from a form.
You may have noticed these types of e-mails while registering on a site.

The .NET Framework makes the task of sending email from a Web page relatively simple. In
order to send an email from an ASP.NET Web page you need to use the SmtpMail class found in
the System.Web.Mail namespace, which contains a static method Send.

We are using System.Web.Mail.SmtpMail to send email in dotnet 1.1 which is obsolete in 2.0.
The System.Net.Mail.SmtpClient Class will provide us the same feature as that of its
predecessor.

This article explains how to use System.Net.Mail namespace to send emails.

Sending Email

The namespace that needs to be imported to send an email is the System.Web.Mail


namespace. We use the SmtpMail and MailMessage classes of this namespace for this purpose.
The MailMessage class provides properties and methods for constructing an email message
The following code shows how to add an attachment to an email.

Using System.IO;
Using System.Web.Mail;

MailAttachment ma=new MailAttachment("c:\sample.txt");


MailMessage mm=new MailMessage();
mm.To ="xyz@programmersheaven.com";
mm.From="abc@yahoo.com";
mm.Body ="Attachment";
mm.Subject="Check out the attached text file";

mm.Attachments.Add(ma);

SmtpMail.SmtpServer="mail.programmersheaven.com";
SmtpMail.Send(mm);

Request / Response Objects

Because of ASP.NET‘s improved object model, much of the functionality of the Request
and Response objects has been deprecated. There remain other uses for these objects.
You can work with cookies, redirect users, check browser capabilities and even send
binary information down the output stream.

QueryString

The QueryString collection is used to retrieve the variable values in the HTTP query
string.

The HTTP query string is specified by the values following the question mark (?), like
this:

<a href= "test.asp?txt=this is a query string test">Link with a query string</a>

The line above generates a variable named txt with the value "this is a query string
test".

Query strings are also generated by form submission, or by a user typing a query into
the address bar of the browser.

Request.QueryString(variable)[(index)|.Count]
Form Collection
The Form collection is used to retrieve the values of form elements from a form that
uses the POST method.

Syntax Request.Form(element)

[(index)|.Count] Example:

Response.Write(Request.Form("color")(i) & "<br />")

ServerVariables Collection
The ServerVariables collection is used to retrieve the server variable values.

Syntax

Request.ServerVariables (server_variable)

Example

response.write(x & "<br />")

ASP.NET Security

First, let‘s establish what we mean by authentication, authorization, and


impersonation. (We‘ll introduce them here but talk about each in more detail later in
this chapter.) These terms can be confusing, so let‘s define them in a more concrete
way by using the metaphor of securing an office building.

Authentication is simply establishing the identity of the user. In the secure office
building, every person must have an ID badge. Each person who works in the building
might be issued a cardkey or badge to display, and a visitor might be asked to wear a
temporary ID.

Authorization is a set of rights granted to particular users. Once the ID is established


through authentication, security isn‘t improved beyond the ability to log an individual‘s
actions unless we enforce that only certain users can access certain resources. In the
secure office building, we might limit specified groups to accessing only certain parts of
the building. For example, only those individuals working on a top-secret project would
be authorized to enter the project lab.

Impersonation is assuming the identity of someone else. In our example,


impersonation would be using the cardkey issued for someone else‘s authentication.
When impersonating, all actions appear to be carried out by the assumed identity.
Windows Authentication Provider ASP.NET uses Windows authentication in
conjunction with IIS authentication. Authentication is performed by IIS in one of three
ways: basic, digest, or Integrated Windows Authentication. When IIS authentication is
complete, ASP.NET uses the authenticated identity to authorize access.

Forms Authentication Provider A system by which unauthenticated requests are


redirected to an HTML form using HTTP client-side redirection. The user provides
credentials and submits the form. If the application authenticates the request, the
system issues a form that contains the credentials or a key for reacquiring the identity.
Subsequent requests are issued with the form in the request headers; they are
authenticated and authorized by an ASP.NET handler using whatever validation method
the application developer specifies.

Passport Authentication Provider Centralized authentication service provided by


Microsoft that offers a single logon and core profile services for member sites.

Syntax

<configuration>
<system.web>
<authentication
mode = " [ Windows | Forms | Passport | None ] ">
</authentication>
</system.web>
</configuration>

SSL Secured

This can be a requirement because SSL increases the CPU load on the web server and
can limit scalability. Often you need SSL only for a small subset of an application. On
the other hand SSL is not the "CPU killer" as sometime stated. IIS6 also support SSL
accelerators that allow to off-load the crypto operations to specialized CPUs.

IMO - in many cases it is totally OK to enable SSL protection for the whole application
which will save you from some headaches. But if you want a partitioned application,
you have to take several things into account

In the case of Forms authentication, the requireSSL attribute also checks if the user is
logging in from an SSL connection before calling FormsAuthentication.SetAuthCookie
(something you have to check yourself if you are issuing tickets manually).
BIBLIOGRAPHY

1. Bayross, Web Enable Commercial Application Development Using

HTML, DHTML, JavaScript, Perl CGI, BPB Publications.

2. Jaworski, Mastering JavaScript, BPB Publications, 1999

3. T. A Powell, complete Reference HTML (Third Edition), TMH, 2002.

4. G. Buczek, ASP.NET Developers Guide, TMH, 2002.

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