El documento presenta un acertijo donde las letras de un nombre están mezcladas y pide al lector que encuentre la primera letra del nombre real. Se da una pista de que las letras forman el nombre "RAQUEL".
1. The document discusses servlets, which are Java classes that extend HttpServlet to generate dynamic web content. It covers creating a basic servlet class, mapping it in the deployment descriptor, packaging it into a WAR file, and analyzing requests and sending responses.
2. It then provides examples of using the request object to retrieve headers, parameters, and cookies, and using the response object to add headers, write content, and send cookies.
3. The final sections discuss using servlets to build a basic web form application that separates the controller and view layers. It also covers using HTTP sessions to share data across requests.
The document discusses the importance of setting clear business direction to avoid failure. It recommends writing down a passionate mission and sticking to it while negotiating obstacles. It presents a formula where planning, execution, and trust lead to results. The document also outlines steps for setting direction including creating an annual operating plan, 90-day plans, weekly actions, and continuously reviewing and updating the direction.
Business coaching can help expand one's knowledge, experience, and results to new heights. It helps understand key business areas like direction, performance gaps, stock turnover, debt collection, customer retention, and the importance of planning and goal setting. Successful businesses rely on strong leadership, shared goals and culture, accountability, empowerment, involvement and participation from their team.
The document summarizes several key Java EE services including resource management, Java Naming and Directory Service (JNDS), security services, and transaction services. Resource management is implemented using resource pooling and activation/deactivation. Security services provide declarative security using roles and securing both EJBs and web components requires defining a security domain, login/error pages, and security declarations in deployment descriptors. Transactions services allow distributed transactions across multiple resources.
1. The document introduces the World Wide Web and its core technologies including HTTP, HTML, web servers, and web browsers.
2. It describes how HTTP works using a request/response model and is stateless, while browser cookies allow for stateful sessions.
3. Examples demonstrate basic HTML pages and forms, HTTP requests and responses, and how dynamic content can be generated using server-side technologies like JSP.
The document provides guidance for entrepreneurs on starting and sustaining a successful business. It discusses common reasons for starting businesses and reasons they often fail, focusing on lack of clear direction. It then offers suggestions in three key areas: setting direction with a vision, mission, goals and plans; marketing with a focus on generating leads, conversion and profit; and building a strong team with leadership, common goals, involvement and development. The overall message is that having a well-planned direction and focusing execution is key to business success.
Securing Community Forest Rights: Progress, Slowdown, New MomentumCIFOR-ICRAF
This presentation by Andy White was given at a session titled "Securing rights as a climate change mitigation strategy" at the Global Landscapes Forum in Lima, Peru, on December 6, 2014.
By discussing how securing rights can serve as proven and cost-effective climate change mitigation strategy, the session built bridges between policy-makers, practitioners, and scholars.
1. The document discusses servlets, which are Java classes that extend HttpServlet to generate dynamic web content. It covers creating a basic servlet class, mapping it in the deployment descriptor, packaging it into a WAR file, and analyzing requests and sending responses.
2. It then provides examples of using the request object to retrieve headers, parameters, and cookies, and using the response object to add headers, write content, and send cookies.
3. The final sections discuss using servlets to build a basic web form application that separates the controller and view layers. It also covers using HTTP sessions to share data across requests.
The document discusses the importance of setting clear business direction to avoid failure. It recommends writing down a passionate mission and sticking to it while negotiating obstacles. It presents a formula where planning, execution, and trust lead to results. The document also outlines steps for setting direction including creating an annual operating plan, 90-day plans, weekly actions, and continuously reviewing and updating the direction.
Business coaching can help expand one's knowledge, experience, and results to new heights. It helps understand key business areas like direction, performance gaps, stock turnover, debt collection, customer retention, and the importance of planning and goal setting. Successful businesses rely on strong leadership, shared goals and culture, accountability, empowerment, involvement and participation from their team.
The document summarizes several key Java EE services including resource management, Java Naming and Directory Service (JNDS), security services, and transaction services. Resource management is implemented using resource pooling and activation/deactivation. Security services provide declarative security using roles and securing both EJBs and web components requires defining a security domain, login/error pages, and security declarations in deployment descriptors. Transactions services allow distributed transactions across multiple resources.
1. The document introduces the World Wide Web and its core technologies including HTTP, HTML, web servers, and web browsers.
2. It describes how HTTP works using a request/response model and is stateless, while browser cookies allow for stateful sessions.
3. Examples demonstrate basic HTML pages and forms, HTTP requests and responses, and how dynamic content can be generated using server-side technologies like JSP.
The document provides guidance for entrepreneurs on starting and sustaining a successful business. It discusses common reasons for starting businesses and reasons they often fail, focusing on lack of clear direction. It then offers suggestions in three key areas: setting direction with a vision, mission, goals and plans; marketing with a focus on generating leads, conversion and profit; and building a strong team with leadership, common goals, involvement and development. The overall message is that having a well-planned direction and focusing execution is key to business success.
Securing Community Forest Rights: Progress, Slowdown, New MomentumCIFOR-ICRAF
This presentation by Andy White was given at a session titled "Securing rights as a climate change mitigation strategy" at the Global Landscapes Forum in Lima, Peru, on December 6, 2014.
By discussing how securing rights can serve as proven and cost-effective climate change mitigation strategy, the session built bridges between policy-makers, practitioners, and scholars.
This document provides an introduction to JavaServer Pages (JSPs), which are web components that generate dynamic web content like servlets. It describes the key differences between JSPs and servlets, and covers various JSP syntax elements like comments, scriptlets, expressions, and directives. It also explains how JSPs are automatically translated into servlets by the application server at deployment time for processing, and provides an example to demonstrate this translation process. The document concludes by presenting an example web application that uses a servlet to process form data and a JSP to display the results.
This document discusses object-relational mapping and persistence in Java. It covers:
1. The need for object modeling in enterprise applications and persisting object state in databases.
2. How the Java Persistence API (JPA) provides object-relational mapping through entity beans, the entity manager interface, and configuration.
3. Core entity manager methods like persisting, retrieving, deleting, and merging entities.
4. Schema mappings for mapping entity classes and relationships to database tables and columns.
The document discusses message-driven beans and Java Messaging Service (JMS). It defines synchronous and asynchronous messaging and explains the need for messaging in software design. It describes JMS elements like the messaging server, clients, and destinations. It provides examples of configuring topic and queue destinations. It also provides examples of message-driven beans that can consume from topics and queues, and JMS client code that acts as producers to topics and queues.
This cash flow model provides a template for forecasting monthly receipts and payments. Key instructions include only inputting actual monthly receipts and payments as forecasts are already completed. Opening balances and totals will auto-calculate. The company can customize receipts and payments labels and contact support with any issues. Proper use and accuracy of the model is not guaranteed by the provider.
This document lists and describes various Java frameworks, tools, and technologies across different categories including testing, logging, build systems, obfuscators, GUIs, charting/reporting, web frameworks, template engines, IDEs, persistence, and aspect-oriented programming. It provides examples of popular Java tools and libraries for unit testing (JUnit), build systems (Ant), obfuscation (JavaGuard, JMangle), web development (Struts, Google Web Toolkit, Echo, OpenXava), IDEs (Eclipse, Netbeans), persistence (Hibernate, iBATIS), logging (Log4j, Simple Log), GUIs (Swing, SWT, Qt), reporting (JasperReports,
The document discusses aspects of being a professional including being highly educated, working autonomously on intellectually challenging tasks, defining technical terms, reading books, referring to references, thinking before working and complaining, and not being overly pedantic. It provides examples of some technical terms and concepts along with explanations to illustrate how to think like a professional.
Value of traditional knowledge for sustainable forest managementCIFOR-ICRAF
This session of the 2014 IUFRO World Congress focused on the relevance of traditional knowledge, practices and social/governance institutions in the conservation, management and restoration of forests and sustainable use of forest biodiversity. Seram Island, Indonesia was used as a case study.
The document discusses object-oriented programming concepts including classes, objects, encapsulation, inheritance, polymorphism, and design patterns. It defines each concept and provides examples to illustrate how they are used in object-oriented programming and modeling. Object-oriented programming is based on representing real-world entities like cars and people as objects that have states, behaviors, and can communicate with each other through messages.
This document describes a proposed university staff database management system. The system aims to simplify the process of finding relevant evaluators and paper setters by maintaining a database of faculty information from various colleges, including personal details, academic records, subjects taught, and college details. Key entities in the conceptual data model include Faculty, Subject Details, and College Details. Screenshots of the frontend are also presented. The system was developed by a project group with guidance from faculty advisors.
The document provides an introduction to Java Enterprise Edition (Java EE). It discusses key concepts such as distributed systems, middleware, the Java EE platform, and Java EE application servers. The Java EE platform consists of the Java SE APIs, Java EE APIs, and a Java EE application server. Applications are built using Java EE components like EJBs and servlets that run within a managed environment provided by the application server.
This document provides an introduction to JavaServer Pages (JSPs), which are web components that generate dynamic web content like servlets. It describes the key differences between JSPs and servlets, and covers various JSP syntax elements like comments, scriptlets, expressions, and directives. It also explains how JSPs are automatically translated into servlets by the application server at deployment time for processing, and provides an example to demonstrate this translation process. The document concludes by presenting an example web application that uses a servlet to process form data and a JSP to display the results.
This document discusses object-relational mapping and persistence in Java. It covers:
1. The need for object modeling in enterprise applications and persisting object state in databases.
2. How the Java Persistence API (JPA) provides object-relational mapping through entity beans, the entity manager interface, and configuration.
3. Core entity manager methods like persisting, retrieving, deleting, and merging entities.
4. Schema mappings for mapping entity classes and relationships to database tables and columns.
The document discusses message-driven beans and Java Messaging Service (JMS). It defines synchronous and asynchronous messaging and explains the need for messaging in software design. It describes JMS elements like the messaging server, clients, and destinations. It provides examples of configuring topic and queue destinations. It also provides examples of message-driven beans that can consume from topics and queues, and JMS client code that acts as producers to topics and queues.
This cash flow model provides a template for forecasting monthly receipts and payments. Key instructions include only inputting actual monthly receipts and payments as forecasts are already completed. Opening balances and totals will auto-calculate. The company can customize receipts and payments labels and contact support with any issues. Proper use and accuracy of the model is not guaranteed by the provider.
This document lists and describes various Java frameworks, tools, and technologies across different categories including testing, logging, build systems, obfuscators, GUIs, charting/reporting, web frameworks, template engines, IDEs, persistence, and aspect-oriented programming. It provides examples of popular Java tools and libraries for unit testing (JUnit), build systems (Ant), obfuscation (JavaGuard, JMangle), web development (Struts, Google Web Toolkit, Echo, OpenXava), IDEs (Eclipse, Netbeans), persistence (Hibernate, iBATIS), logging (Log4j, Simple Log), GUIs (Swing, SWT, Qt), reporting (JasperReports,
The document discusses aspects of being a professional including being highly educated, working autonomously on intellectually challenging tasks, defining technical terms, reading books, referring to references, thinking before working and complaining, and not being overly pedantic. It provides examples of some technical terms and concepts along with explanations to illustrate how to think like a professional.
Value of traditional knowledge for sustainable forest managementCIFOR-ICRAF
This session of the 2014 IUFRO World Congress focused on the relevance of traditional knowledge, practices and social/governance institutions in the conservation, management and restoration of forests and sustainable use of forest biodiversity. Seram Island, Indonesia was used as a case study.
The document discusses object-oriented programming concepts including classes, objects, encapsulation, inheritance, polymorphism, and design patterns. It defines each concept and provides examples to illustrate how they are used in object-oriented programming and modeling. Object-oriented programming is based on representing real-world entities like cars and people as objects that have states, behaviors, and can communicate with each other through messages.
This document describes a proposed university staff database management system. The system aims to simplify the process of finding relevant evaluators and paper setters by maintaining a database of faculty information from various colleges, including personal details, academic records, subjects taught, and college details. Key entities in the conceptual data model include Faculty, Subject Details, and College Details. Screenshots of the frontend are also presented. The system was developed by a project group with guidance from faculty advisors.
The document provides an introduction to Java Enterprise Edition (Java EE). It discusses key concepts such as distributed systems, middleware, the Java EE platform, and Java EE application servers. The Java EE platform consists of the Java SE APIs, Java EE APIs, and a Java EE application server. Applications are built using Java EE components like EJBs and servlets that run within a managed environment provided by the application server.