Computer programming language
SGML
SGML (standard
generalized markup language) is an international standard for the
definition of markup languages; that is, it is a metalanguage. Markup
consists of notations called tags that specify the function of a piece
of text or how it is to be displayed. SGML emphasizes descriptive
markup, in which a tag might be “<emphasis>.” Such a markup
denotes the document function, and it could be interpreted as reverse
video on a computer screen, underlining by a typewriter, or italics in
typeset text.
SGML is used to specify DTDs (document type definitions). A DTD defines
a kind of document, such as a report, by specifying what elements must
appear in the document—e.g., <Title>—and giving rules for the use
of document elements, such as that a paragraph may appear within a table
entry but a table may not appear within a paragraph. A marked-up text
may be analyzed by a parsing program to determine if it conforms to a
DTD. Another program may read the markups to prepare an index or to
translate the document into PostScript for printing. Yet another might
generate large type or audio for readers with visual or hearing
disabilities.
World Wide Web display languages
HTML
The World Wide Web is a system for displaying text, graphics, and audio retrieved over theInternet on
a computer monitor. Each retrieval unit is known as a Web page, and
such pages frequently contain “links” that allow related pages to be
retrieved. HTML (hypertextmark up language) is the markup language for encoding Web pages. It was designed by Tim Berners-Lee at the CERN nuclear
physics laboratory in Switzerland during the 1980s and is defined by an
SGML DTD. HTML markup tags specify document elements such as headings,
paragraphs, and tables. They mark up a document for display by a computer programknown
as a Web browser. The browser interprets the tags, displaying the
headings, paragraphs, and tables in a layout that is adapted to the
screen size and fonts available to it.
HTML documents also contain anchors, which are tags that specify links to other Web pages. An anchor has the form <A HREF= “http://www.britannica.com”>
Encyclopædia Britannica</A>, where the quoted string is the URL
(universal resource locator) to which the link points (the Web
“address”) and the text following it is what appears in a Web browser,
underlined to show that it is a link to another page. What is displayed
as a single page may also be formed from multiple URLs, some containing
text and others graphics.
XML
HTML does not allow one to define new text elements; that is, it is not extensible. XML(extensible
markup language) is a simplified form of SGML intended for documents
that are published on the Web. Like SGML, XML uses DTDs to define
document types and the meanings of tags used in them. XML adopts
conventions that make it easy to parse, such as that document entities
are marked by both a beginning and an ending tag, such as
<BEGIN>…</BEGIN>. XML provides more kinds of hypertext links
than HTML, such as bidirectional links and links relative to a document
subsection.
Because
an author may define new tags, an XML DTD must also contain rules that
instruct a Web browser how to interpret them—how an entity is to be
displayed or how it is to generate an action such as preparing an e-mail
message.
WEB SCRIPTING
Web
pages marked up with HTML or XML are largely static documents. Web
scripting can add information to a page as a reader uses it or let the
reader enter information that may, for example, be passed on to the
order department of an online business. CGI (common
gateway interface) provides one mechanism; it transmits requests and
responses between the reader’s Web browser and the Web server that
provides the page. The CGI component on the server contains small
programs called scripts
that take information from the browser system or provide it for
display. A simple script might ask the reader’s name, determine the
Internet address of the system that the reader uses, and print a
greeting. Scripts may be written in any programming language, but,
because they are generally simple text-processing routines, scripting
languages like PERL are particularly appropriate.
Another approach is to use a language designed for Web scripts to be executed by the browser. JavaScript is one such language, designed by the Netscape Communications Corp.,
which may be used with both Netscape’s and Microsoft’s browsers.
JavaScript is a simple language, quite different from Java. A JavaScript
program may be embedded in a Web page with the HTML tag <script
language=“JavaScript”>. JavaScript instructions following that tag
will be executed by the browser when the page is selected. In order to
speed up display of dynamic (interactive) pages, JavaScript is often
combined with XML or some other language for exchanging information
between the server and the client’s browser. In particular, the
XMLHttpRequest command enables asynchronous data requests from the
server without requiring the server to resend the entire Web page. This
approach, or “philosophy,” of programming is called Ajax (asynchronous JavaScript and X ML).
VB Script is
a subset of Visual Basic. Originally developed for Microsoft’s Office
suite of programs, it was later used for Web scripting as well. Its
capabilities are similar to those of JavaScript, and it may be embedded
in HTML in the same fashion.
Behind
the use of such scripting languages for Web programming lies the idea
of component programming, in which programs are constructed by combining
independent previously written components without any further language
processing. JavaScript and VB Script programs were designed as
components that may be attached to Web browsers to control how they
display information.
Elements of programming
Despite
notational differences, contemporary computer languages provide many of
the same programming structures. These include basic control structures and data structures. The former provide the means to express algorithms, and the latter provide ways to organize information.
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