| Terms |
Definitions |
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| A Java keyword used in a class definition to
specify that a class is not to be instantiated, but rather inherited by
other classes. An abstract class can have abstract methods that are not
implemented in the abstract class, but in subclasses. |
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| A class that contains one or more abstract
methods, and therefore can never be instantiated. Abstract classes are
defined so that other classes can extend them and make them concrete by
implementing the abstract methods. |
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| A method that has no implementation. |
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| Abstract Window Toolkit (AWT) |
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| A collection of graphical user interface
(GUI) components that were implemented using native-platform versions of
the components. These components provide that subset of functionality which
is common to all native platforms. Largely supplanted by the Project Swing
component set. See also Swing. |
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| The methods by which interactions with
resources are limited to collections of users or programs for the purpose
of enforcing integrity, confidentiality, or availability constraints. |
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| The acronym for the four properties
guaranteed by transactions: atomicity, consistency, isolation, and
durability. |
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| The arguments specified in a particular
method call. See also formal parameter list. |
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| Application Programming Interface. The
specification of how a programmer writing an application accesses the
behavior and state of classes and objects. |
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| A component that typically executes in a Web
browser, but can execute in a variety of other applications or devices that
support the applet programming model. |
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| A data item specified in a method call. An
argument can be a literal value, a variable, or an expression. |
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| A collection of data items, all of the same
type, in which each item's position is uniquely designated by an integer. |
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| American Standard Code for Information
Interchange. A standard assignment of 7-bit numeric codes to characters.
See also Unicode. |
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| Refers to an operation that is never
interrupted or left in an incomplete state under any circumstance. |
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| The process by which an entity proves to
another entity that it is acting on behalf of a specific identity. |
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| Automatic conversion between reference and
primitive types. |
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| A reusable software component that conforms
to certain design and naming conventions. The conventions enable beans to
be easily combined to create an application using tools that understand the
conventions. |
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| An operator that has two arguments. |
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| The smallest unit of information in a
computer, with a value of either 0 or 1. |
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| An operator that manipulates the bits of one
or more of its operands individually and in parallel. Examples include the
binary logical operators (&, |, ^), the binary shift operators
(<<, >>, >>>) and the unary one's complement operator
(~). |
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| In the Java programming language, any code
between matching braces. Example: { x = 1; }. |
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| Refers to an expression or variable that can
have only a true or false value. The Java programming language provides the
boolean type and the literal values true and false. |
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| A Java keyword used to resume program
execution at the statement immediately following the current statement. If
followed by a label, the program resumes execution at the labeled
statement. |
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| A sequence of eight bits. Java provides a
corresponding byte type. |
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| Machine-independent code generated by the
Java compiler and executed by the Java interpreter. |
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| A Java keyword that defines a group of
statements to begin executing if a value specified matches the value
defined by a preceding switch keyword. |
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| Explicit conversion from one data type to
another. |
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| A Java keyword used to declare a block of
statements to be executed in the event that a Java exception, or run time
error, occurs in a preceding try block. |
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| A Java keyword used to declare a variable of
type character. |
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In
the Java programming language, a type that defines the implementation of a
particular kind of object. A class definition defines instance and class
variables and methods, as well as specifying the interfaces the class
implements and the immediate superclass of the class. If the superclass is
not explicitly specified, the superclass will implicitly be Object. |
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| A method that is invoked without reference to
a particular object. Class methods affect the class as a whole, not a
particular instance of the class. Also called a static method. See also
instance method. |
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| A data item associated with a particular
class as a whole--not with particular instances of the class. Class
variables are defined in class definitions. Also called a static field. See
also instance variable. |
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| An environmental variable which tells the
Java virtual machine1 and Java technology-based applications where to find
the class libraries, including user-defined class libraries. |
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| In the client/server model of communications,
the client is a process that remotely accesses resources of a compute
server, such as compute power and large memory capacity. |
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| Works together with the code attribute in the
<APPLET> tag to give a complete specification of where to find the
main applet class file: code specifies the name of the file, and codebase
specifies the URL of the directory containing the file. |
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| In a program, explanatory text that is
ignored by the compiler. In programs written in the Java programming
language, comments are delimited using // or /.../. |
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| The point in a transaction when all updates
to any resources involved in the transaction are made permanent. |
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| The smallest unit of source code that can be
compiled. In the current implementation of the Java platform, the
compilation unit is a file. |
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| A program to translate source code into code
to be executed by a computer. The Java compiler translates source code
written in the Java programming language into bytecode for the Java virtual
machine1. See also interpreter. |
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| The process of superimposing one image on
another to create a single image. |
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| A pseudo-method that creates an object. In
the Java programming language, constructors are instance methods with the
same name as their class. Constructors are invoked using the new keyword. |
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| A reserved Java keyword not used by current
versions of the Java programming language. |
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| A Java keyword used to resume program
execution at the end of the current loop. If followed by a label, continue
resumes execution where the label occurs. |
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The
field values of a session bean plus the transitive closure of the objects
reachable from the bean's fields. The transitive closure of a bean is defined
in terms of the serialization protocol for the Java programming language,
that is, the fields that would be stored by serializing the bean instance. |
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| Common Object Request Broker Architecture. A
language independent, distributed object model specified by the Object
Management Group (OMG). |
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A
public class (or interface) that is a standard member of the Java Platform.
The intent is that the core classes for the Java platform, at minimum, are
available on all operating systems where the Java platform runs. A program
written entirely in the Java programming language relies only on core
classes, meaning it can run anywhere. . |
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| The required set of APIs in a Java platform
edition which must be supported in any and all compatible implementations. |
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| The information describing the security
attributes of a principal. Credentials can be acquired only through
authentication or delegation. |
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| A segment of code in which a thread uses
resources (such as certain instance variables) that can be used by other
threads, but that must not be used by them at the same time. |
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| A statement that establishes an identifier
and associates attributes with it, without necessarily reserving its
storage (for data) or providing the implementation (for methods). See also
definition. |
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| A Java keyword optionally used after all case
conditions in a switch statement. If all case conditions are not matched by
the value of the switch variable, the default keyword will be executed. |
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| A declaration that reserves storage (for
data) or provides implementation (for methods). See also declaration. |
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| An act whereby one principal authorizes
another principal to use its identity or privileges with some restrictions. |
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| Refers to a class, interface, constructor,
method or field that is no longer recommended, and may cease to exist in a
future version. |
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| Class X is "derived from" class Y
if class X extends class Y. See also subclass, superclass. |
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| Running in more than one address space. |
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| An application made up of distinct components
running in separate runtime environments, usually on different platforms
connected through a network. Typical distributed applications are two-tier
(client/server), three-tier (client/middleware/server), and n-tier
(client/multiple middleware/multiple servers). |
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| A Java keyword used to declare a loop that
will iterate a block of statements. The loop's exit condition can be
specified with the while keyword. |
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| Document Object Model. A tree of objects with
interfaces for traversing the tree and writing an XML version of it, as
defined by the W3C specification. |
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| A Java keyword used to define a variable of
type double. |
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| In the Java programming language
specification, describes a floating point number that holds 64 bits of
data. See also single precision. |
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| Document Type Definition. A description of
the structure and properties of a class of XML files. |
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| A Java keyword used to execute a block of
statements in the case that the test condition with the if keyword
evaluates to false. |
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| The availability of Java 2 Platform, Micro
Edition technology under a restrictive license agreement that allows a
licensee to leverage certain Java technologies to create and deploy a
closed-box application that exposes no APIs. |
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The
localization of knowledge within a module. Because objects encapsulate data
and implementation, the user of an object can view the object as a black box
that provides services. Instance variables and methods can be added, deleted,
or changed, but as long as the services provided by the object remain the
same, code that uses the object can continue to use it without being
rewritten. See also instance variable, instance method. |
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| A Java keyword used to declare an enumerated
type. |
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| A type whose legal values consist of a fixed
set of constants. |
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| An event during program execution that
prevents the program from continuing normally; generally, an error. The
Java programming language supports exceptions with the try, catch, and
throw keywords. See also exception handler. |
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| A block of code that reacts to a specific
type of exception. If the exception is for an error that the program can
recover from, the program can resume executing after the exception handler
has executed. |
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| An application that runs from within an HTML
file. See also applet. |
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| Class X extends class Y to add functionality,
either by adding fields or methods to class Y, or by overriding methods of
class Y. An interface extends another interface by adding methods. Class X
is said to be a subclass of class Y. See also derived from. |
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| A data member of a class. Unless specified
otherwise, a field is not static. |
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| A Java keyword. You define an entity once and
cannot change it or derive from it later. More specifically: a final class
cannot be subclassed, a final method cannot be overridden and a final
variable cannot change from its initialized value. |
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| A Java keyword that executes a block of
statements regardless of whether a Java Exception, or run time error,
occurred in a block defined previously by the try keyword. |
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| A Java keyword used to define a floating
point number variable. |
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| A Java keyword used to declare a loop that
reiterates statements. The programmer can specify the statements to be
executed, exit conditions, and initialization variables for the loop. |
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| File Transfer Protocol. FTP, which is based
on TCP/IP, enables the fetching and storing of files between hosts on the
Internet. See also TCP/IP. |
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| The parameters specified in the definition of
a particular method. See also actual parameter list. |
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| The automatic detection and freeing of memory
that is no longer in use. The Java runtime system performs garbage
collection so that programmers never explicitly free objects. |
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A
class, interface, or method that declares one or more type variables. These
type variables are known as type parameters. A generic declaration defines a
set of parameterized types, one for each possible invocation of the type
parameter section. At runtime, all of these parameterized types share the
same class, interface, or method. |
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| This is a reserved Java keyword. However, it
is not used by current versions of the Java programming language. |
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| A collection of principals within a given
security policy domain. |
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| Graphical User Interface. Refers to the
techniques involved in using graphics, along with a keyboard and a mouse,
to provide an easy-to-use interface to some program. |
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| The numbering system that uses 16 as its
base. The marks 0-9 and a-f (or equivalently A-F) represent the digits 0
through 15. In programs written in the Java programming language,
hexadecimal numbers must be preceded with 0x. See also octal. |
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| A classification of relationships in which
each item except the top one (known as the root) is a specialized form of
the item above it. Each item can have one or more items below it in the
hierarchy. In the Java class hierarchy, the root is the Object class. |
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| HyperText Markup Language. This is a file
format, based on SGML, for hypertext documents on the Internet. It is very
simple and allows for the embedding of images, sounds, video streams, form
fields and simple text formatting. References to other objects are embedded
using URLs. |
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| HyperText Transfer Protocol. The Internet
protocol, based on TCP/IP, used to fetch hypertext objects from remote
hosts. See also TCP/IP. |
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| HyperText Transfer Protocol layered over the
SSL protocol. |
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| Interface Definition Language. APIs written
in the Java programming language that provide standards-based
interoperability and connectivity with CORBA (Common Object Request Broker
Architecture). |
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| The name of an item in a program written in
the Java programming language. |
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| Internet Inter-ORB Protocol. A protocol used
for communication between CORBA object request brokers. |
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| A Java keyword used to conduct a conditional
test and execute a block of statements if the test evaluates to true. |
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| An act whereby one entity assumes the
identity and privileges of another entity without restrictions and without
any indication visible to the recipients of the impersonator's calls that
delegation has taken place. Impersonation is a case of simple delegation. |
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| A Java keyword included in the class
declaration to specify any interfaces that are implemented by the current
class. |
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| A Java keyword used at the beginning of a
source file that can specify classes or entire packages to be referred to
later without including their package names in the reference. |
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| The concept of classes automatically
containing the variables and methods defined in their supertypes. See also
superclass, subclass. |
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| An object of a particular class. In programs
written in the Java programming language, an instance of a class is created
using the new operator followed by the class name. |
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| Any method that is invoked with respect to an
instance of a class. Also called simply a method. See also class method. |
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| Any item of data that is associated with a
particular object. Each instance of a class has its own copy of the
instance variables defined in the class. Also called a field. See also
class variable. |
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| A two-argument Java keyword that tests
whether the runtime type of its first argument is assignment compatible
with its second argument. |
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| A Java keyword used to define a variable of
type integer. |
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| A Java keyword used to define a collection of
method definitions and constant values. It can later be implemented by
classes that define this interface with the "implements" keyword. |
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| An enormous network consisting of literally
millions of hosts from many organizations and countries around the world.
It is physically put together from many smaller networks and data travels
by a common set of protocols. |
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Internet
Protocol. The basic protocol of the Internet. It enables the unreliable
delivery of individual packets from one host to another. It makes no
guarantees about whether or not the packet will be delivered, how long it
will take, or if multiple packets will arrive in the order they were sent.
Protocols built on top of this add the notions of connection and reliability.
See also TCP/IP. |
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| A module that alternately decodes and
executes every statement in some body of code. The Java interpreter decodes
and executes bytecode for the Java virtual machine1. See also compiler,
runtime system. |
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| See: Java APIs for Integrated Networks (JAIN) |
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JAR
(Java Archive) is a platform-independent file format that aggregates many
files into one. Multiple applets written in the Java programming language,
and their requisite components (.class files, images, sounds and other
resource files) can be bundled in a JAR file and subsequently downloaded to a
browser in a single HTTP transaction. It also supports file compression and
digital signatures. |
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| Sun's trademark for a set of technologies for
creating and safely running software programs in both stand-alone and
networked environments. |
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| The second generation of the Java platform.
(The first generation was the JDK.) Also see "Java Platform" and
"Java Platform Editions". |
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| Enterprise Edition (J2EE platform),See Java 2
Platform, Enterprise Edition, under Java Platform Editions. |
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| Micro Edition (J2ME platform),See Java 2
Platform, Micro Edition, under Java Platform Editions. |
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| Standard Edition (J2SE platform),See Java 2
Platform, Standard Edition, under Java Platform Editions. |
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| Standard Edition,The Software Development Kit
(SDK) is development environment for building applications, applets, and
components using the Java programming language. This SDK provides a
reference implementation of the J2SE platform. |
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| Java APIs for Integrated Networks (JAIN) |
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| enables the rapid development of Next
Generation telecom products and services on the Java platform. |
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| An ISO 7816-4 compliant application
environment focused on smart cards. |
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| Java Compatibility Kit (JCK) |
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| A test suite, a set of tools, and other
requirements used to certify a Java platform implementation conformant both
to the applicable Java platform specifications and to Java Software
reference implementations. |
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| Java Database Connectivity (JDBC) |
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| An industry standard for database-independent
connectivity between the Java platform and a wide range of databases. The
JDBC provides a call-level API for SQL-based database access. |
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| Java Development Kit (JDK) |
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| A software development environment for
writing applets and applications in the Java programming language.
Technically, the JDK is the correct name for all versions of the Java
platform from 1.0 to 1.1.x. |
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| Java Foundation Classes (JFC) |
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| An extension that adds graphical user
interface class libraries to the Abstract Windowing Toolkit (AWT). |
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| See Java Interface Definition Language |
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| Java Interface Definition Language (IDL) |
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| A set of Java APIs that provide CORBA (Common
Object Request Broker Architecture) interoperability and connectivity
capabilities for the J2EE platform. These capabilities enable J2EE
applications to invoke operations on remote network services using the OMG
IDL and IIOP. |
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| A set of APIs that support the integration of
audio and video clips, 2D fonts, graphics, and images as well as 3D models
and telephony. |
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| The core framework supports clocks for
synchronizing between different media (e.g., audio and video output). The
standard extension framework allows users to do full audio and video
streaming. |
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| Java Naming and Directory Interface (JNDI) |
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| A set of APIs that assists with the
interfacing to multiple naming and directory services. |
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| A standard programming interface for writing
Java native methods and embedding the JVM into native applications. The
primary goal is binary compatibility of native method libraries across all
JVM implementations on a given platform. |
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Consists
of class libraries, a Java virtual machine (JVM) and class loader (which
comprise the runtime environment) and a compiler, debugger and other tools
(which comprise the development kit). |
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In
addition, the runtime platform is subject to a set of compatibility
requirements to ensure consistent and compatible implementations.
Implementations that meet the compatibility requirements may qualify for
Sun's targeted compatibility brands. |
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Java
2 is the current generation of the Java Platform. |
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A
Java platform "edition" is a definitive and agreed-upon version of
the Java platform that provides the functionality needed over a broad market
segment. |
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An
edition is comprised of two kinds of API sets: (i) "core packages,"
which are essential to all implementations of a given platform edition, and
(ii) "optional packages," which are available for a given platform
edition and which may be supported in a compatible implementation. |
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There
are 3 distinct editions of the Java Platform: |
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*
Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition: |
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The
edition of the Java platform that is targeted at enterprises to enable
development, deployment, and management of multi-tier server-centric
applications. |
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*
Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition: |
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The
edition of the Java platform that is targeted at small, standalone or
connectable consumer and embedded devices to enable development, deployment,
and management of applications that can scale from smart cards through mobile
devices and set-top boxes to conventional computing devices. |
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*
Java 2 Platform, Standard Edition: |
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The
edition of the Java platform that enables development, deployment, and
management of cross-platform, general-purpose applications. |
| Java Remote Method Invocation (RMI) |
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| A distributed object model for Java program
to Java program, in which the methods of remote objects written in the Java
programming language can be invoked from other Java virtual machines1,
possibly on different hosts. |
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| Java Runtime Environment (JRE) |
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| A subset of the Java Development Kit (JDK)
for end-users and developers who want to redistribute the runtime
environment alone. The Java runtime environment consists of the Java
virtual machine1, the Java core classes, and supporting files. |
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| A software "execution engine" that
safely and compatibly executes the byte codes in Java class files on a
microprocessor (whether in a computer or in another electronic device). |
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| A portable, platform-independent reusable
component model. A component that conforms to this model is called a bean. |
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| A tool for checking compliance of
applications and applets to a specification. |
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| A tool for tracking and managing source file
changes, written in Java. |
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| A Web scripting language that is used in both
browsers and Web servers. Like all scripting languages, it is used
primarily to tie other components together or to accept user input. |
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| A technology that provides distributed
persistence and data exchange mechanisms for code in Java. |
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| See Java Database Connectivity. |
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| Java Development Kit. A software development
environment for writing applets and application in Java . |
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| See Java Foundation Classes. |
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A
set of Java APIs that may be incorporated an optional package for any Java 2
Platform Edition. The Jini APIs enable transparent networking of devices and
services and eliminates the need for system or network administration
intervention by a user. |
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The
Jini technology is currently an optional package available on all Java
platform editions. |
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| See Java Naming and Directory Interface. |
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| See Java Native Interface. |
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| See Java Runtime Environment |
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| Just-in-time (JIT) Compiler |
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| A compiler that converts all of the bytecode
into native machine code just as a Java program is run. This results in
run-time speed improvements over code that is interpreted by a Java virtual
machine. |
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| See Java Virtual Machine (JVM). |
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| Java sets aside words as keywords - these
words are reserved by the language itself and therefore are not available
as names for variables or methods. |
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| Pertaining to how the characters in source
code are translated into tokens that the compiler can understand. |
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| A module that builds an executable, complete
program from component machine code modules. The Java linker creates a
runnable program from compiled classes. See also compiler, interpreter,
runtime system. |
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| The basic representation of any integer,
floating point, or character value. For example, 3.0 is a double-precision
floating point literal, and "a" is a character literal. |
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| A data item known within a block, but
inaccessible to code outside the block. For example, any variable defined
within a method is a local variable and can't be used outside the method. |
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| A Java keyword used to define a variable of
type long. |
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| A field or method of a class. Unless
specified otherwise, a member is not static. |
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| A function defined in a class. See also
instance method, class method. Unless specified otherwise, a method is not
static. |
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| Describes a program that is designed to have
parts of its code execute concurrently. See also thread. |
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| A Java keyword that is used in method
declarations to specify that the method is not implemented in the same Java
source file, but rather in another language. |
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| A Java keyword used to create an instance of
a class. |
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| The null type has one value, the null
reference, represented by the literal null, which is formed from ASCII
characters. A null literal is always of the null type. |
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| The principal building blocks of
object-oriented programs. Each object is a programming unit consisting of
data (instance variables) and functionality (instance methods). See also
class. |
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| A software design method that models the
characteristics of abstract or real objects using classes and objects. |
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| The numbering system using 8 as its base,
using the numerals 0-7 as its digits. In programs written in the Java
programming language, octal numbers must be preceded with 0. See also
hexadecimal. |
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| The set or sets of APIs in a Java platform
edition which are available with and may be supported in a compatible
implementation. |
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Over
time, optional packages may become required in an edition as the marketplace
requires them. |
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| Object Request Broker. A library than enables
CORBA objects to locate and communicate with one another. |
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| A principal native to the operating system on
which the Java platform is executing. |
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| Object Transaction Service. A definition of
the interfaces that permit CORBA objects to participate in transactions. |
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| Using one identifier to refer to multiple
items in the same scope. In the Java programming language, you can overload
methods but not variables or operators. |
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| Providing a different implementation of a
method in a subclass of the class that originally defined the method. |
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| A group of types. Packages are declared with
the package keyword. |
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| In networking, any functional unit in the
same layer as another entity. |
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| The protocol for transferring the state of a
bean between its instance variables and an underlying database. |
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| The picture element on a display area, such
as a monitor screen or printed page. Each pixel is individually accessible. |
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| Portable Object Adapter. A CORBA standard for
building server-side applications that are portable across heterogeneous
ORBs. |
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| An object that uniquely identifies an entity
bean within a home. |
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| A variable data type in which the variable's
value is of the appropriate size and format for its type: a number, a
character, or a boolean value. |
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| The identity assigned to an entity as a
result of authentication. |
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| A Java keyword used in a method or variable
declaration. It signifies that the method or variable can only be accessed
by other elements of its class. |
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| A security attribute that does not have the
property of uniqueness and which may be shared by many principals. An
example of a privilege is a group. |
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| A virtual address space containing one or
more threads. |
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| Characteristics of an object that users can
set, such as the color of a window. |
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A
profile is a collection of Java APIs that complements one or more Java 2
Platform Editions by adding domain-specific capabilities. Profiles may also
include other defined profiles. A profile implementation requires a Java 2
Platform Edition to create a complete development and deployment environment
in a targeted vertical market. Each profile is subject to an associated set
of compatibility requirements. |
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Profiles
may be usable on one or more editions. Some examples of profiles within the
Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition are: |
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*
Personal Profile- for non-PC products that need to display Web-compatible
Java-based content |
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*
Java Card - for secure smart cards and other severely memory-constrained
devices. |
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| A Java keyword used in a method or variable
declaration. It signifies that the method or variable can only be accessed
by elements residing in its class, subclasses, or classes in the same
package. |
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| A Java keyword used in a method or variable
declaration. It signifies that the method or variable can be accessed by
elements residing in other classes. |
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| A two-dimensional rectangular grid of pixels. |
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| See security policy domain. Also, a string,
passed as part of an HTTP request during basic authentication, that defines
a protection space. The protected resources on a server can be partitioned
into a set of protection spaces, each with its own authentication scheme
and/or authorization database. |
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| A variable data type in which the variable's
value is an address. |
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| A Java keyword used to finish the execution
of a method. It can be followed by a value required by the method
definition. |
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| See Java Remote Method Invocation. |
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| The point in a transaction when all updates
to any databases involved in the transaction are reversed. |
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| In a hierarchy of items, the one item from
which all other items are descended. The root item has nothing above it in
the hierarchy. See also hierarchy, class, package. |
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| Remote Procedure Call. Executing what looks
like a normal procedure call (or method invocation) by sending network
packets to some remote host. |
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The
software environment in which programs compiled for the Java virtual machine1
can run. The runtime system includes all the code necessary to load programs
written in the Java programming language, dynamically link native methods,
manage memory, handle exceptions, and an implementation of the Java virtual
machine, which may be a Java interpreter. |
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| Simple API for XML. An event-driven,
serial-access mechanism for accessing XML documents. |
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Comprises
a number of cooperating system components, ranging from security managers
that execute as part of the application, to security measures designed into
the Java virtual machine1 and the language itself. The sandbox ensures that
an untrusted, and possibly malicious, application cannot gain access to
system resources. |
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A
characteristic of an identifier that determines where the identifier can be
used. Most identifiers in the Java programming environment have either class
or local scope. Instance and class variables and methods have class scope;
they can be used outside the class and its subclasses only by prefixing them
with an instance of the class or (for class variables and methods) with the
class name. All other variables are declared within methods and have local
scope; they can be used only within the enclosing block. |
| Secure Socket Layer (SSL) |
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| A protocol that allows communication between
a Web browser and a server to be encrypted for privacy. |
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| A set of properties associated with a
principal. Security attributes can be associated with a principal by an
authentication protocol. |
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| An object that encapsulates the shared state
information regarding security between two entities. |
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A
scope over which security policies are defined and enforced by a security
administrator. A security policy domain has the following characteristics: |
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It
has a collection of users (or principals). |
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It
uses a well defined authentication protocol(s) for authenticating users (or
principals). |
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It
may have groups to simplify setting of security policies. |
| security technology domain |
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| A scope over which the same security
mechanism is used to enforce a security policy. Multiple security policy
domains can exist within a single technology domain. |
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| The encoding of objects, and the objects
reachable from them, into a stream of bytes and the complementary
reconstruction of the object graph from the stream. |
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| A Java keyword used to define a variable of
type short. |
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| In the Java language specification, describes
a floating point number with 32 bits of data. See also double precision. |
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| Standardized Generalized Markup Language. An
ISO/ANSI/ECMA standard that specifies a way to annotate text documents with
information about types of sections of a document. |
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| The Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) uses
a combination of XML-based data structuring and the Hyper Text Transfer
Protocol (HTTP) to define a standardized method for invoking methods in
objects distributed in diverse operating environments across the Internet. |
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| Structured Query Language. The standardized
relational database language for defining database objects and manipulating
data. |
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A
Java keyword used to define a variable as a class variable. Classes maintain
one copy of class variables regardless of how many instances exist of that
class. static can also be used to define a method as a class method. Class
methods are invoked by the class instead of a specific instance, and can only
operate on class variables. |
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| Another name for class variable. |
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| Another name for class method. |
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| A stream is simply a byte-stream of data that
is sent from a sender to a receiver. There are two basic categories, so the
java.io package includes two abstract classes (InputStream and
OutputStream). |
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| An array that is inside another array. |
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| A class that is derived from a particular
class, perhaps with one or more classes in between. See also superclass,
supertype. |
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| If type X extends or implements type Y, then
X is a subtype of Y. See also supertype. |
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| A class from which a particular class is
derived, perhaps with one or more classes in between. See also subclass,
subtype. |
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| A Java keyword used to access members of a
class inherited by the class in which it appears. |
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| The supertypes of a type are all the
interfaces and classes that are extended or implemented by that type. See
also subtype, superclass. |
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| A Java keyword used to evaluate a variable
that can later be matched with a value specified by the case keyword in
order to execute a group of statements. |
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A
collection of graphical user interface (GUI) components that runs uniformly
on any native platform which supports the Java virtual machine*. Because they
are written entirely in the Java programming language, these components may
provide functionality above and beyond that provided by native-platform
equivalents. (Contrast with AWT.) |
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| A keyword in the Java programming language
that, when applied to a method or code block, guarantees that at most one
thread at a time executes that code. |
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| Transmission Control Protocol based on IP.
This is an Internet protocol that provides for the reliable delivery of
streams of data from one host to another. See also IP. |
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| Technology Compatibility Kit (TCK) |
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| A test suite, a set of tools, and other
requirements used to certify an implementation of a particular Sun
technology conformant both to the applicable specifications and to Sun or
Sun-designated reference implementations. |
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| A system that runs a very light operating
system with no local system administration and executes applications
delivered over the network. |
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| A Java keyword that can be used to represent
an instance of the class in which it appears. this can be used to access
class variables and methods. |
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The
basic unit of program execution. A process can have several threads running
concurrently, each performing a different job, such as waiting for events or
performing a time-consuming job that the program doesn't need to complete
before going on. When a thread has finished its job, the thread is suspended
or destroyed. See also process. |
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| A Java keyword that allows the user to throw
an exception or any class that implements the "throwable"
interface. |
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| A Java keyword used in method declarations
that specify which exceptions are not handled within the method but rather
passed to the next higher level of the program. |
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| An atomic unit of work that modifies data. A
transaction encloses one or more program statements, all of which either
complete or roll back. Transactions enable multiple users to access the
same data concurrently. |
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| transaction isolation level |
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| The degree to which the intermediate state of
the data being modified by a transaction is visible to other concurrent
transactions and data being modified by other transactions is visible to
it. |
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| Provides the services and management
functions required to support transaction demarcation, transactional
resource management, synchronization, and transaction context propagation. |
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| A keyword in the Java programming language
that indicates that a field is not part of the serialized form of an
object. When an object is serialized, the values of its transient fields
are not included in the serial representation, while the values of its
non-transient fields are included. |
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A
Java keyword that defines a block of statements that may throw a Java
language exception. If an exception is thrown, an optional catch block can
handle specific exceptions thrown within the try block. Also, an optional
finally block will be executed regardless of whether an exception is thrown
or not. |
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| A 16-bit character set defined by ISO 10646.
See also ASCII. All source code in the Java programming environment is
written in Unicode. |
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| Uniform Resource Identifier. A compact string
of characters for identifying an abstract or physical resource. A URI is
either a URL or a URN. URLs and URNs are concrete entities that actually
exist; A URI is an abstract superclass. |
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Uniform
Resource Locator. A standard for writing a text reference to an arbitrary
piece of data in the WWW. A URL looks like
"protocol://host/localinfo" where protocol specifies a protocol to
use to fetch the object (like HTTP or FTP), host specifies the Internet name
of the host on which to find it, and localinfo is a string (often a file
name) passed to the protocol handler on the remote host. |
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| Uniform Resource Name. A unique identifier
that identifies an entity, but doesn't tell where it is located. A system
can use a URN to look up an entity locally before trying to find it on the
Web. It also allows the Web location to change, while still allowing the
entity to be found. |
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| An item of data named by an identifier. Each
variable has a type, such as int or Object, and a scope. See also class
variable, instance variable, local variable. |
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An
abstract specification for a computing device that can be implemented in
different ways, in software or hardware. You compile to the instruction set
of a virtual machine much like you'd compile to the instruction set of a
microprocessor. The Java virtual machine consists of a bytecode instruction
set, a set of registers, a stack, a garbage-collected heap, and an area for
storing methods. |
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| A Java keyword used in method declarations to
specify that the method does not return any value. void can also be used as
a nonfunctional statement. |
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| A Java keyword used in variable declarations
that specifies that the variable is modified asynchronously by concurrently
running threads. |
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| Software that provides services to access the
Internet, an intranet, or an extranet. A Web server hosts Web sites,
provides support for HTTP and other protocols, and executes server-side
programs (such as CGI scripts or servlets) that perform certain functions. |
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| A Java keyword used to declare a loop that
iterates a block of statements. The loop's exit condition is specified as
part of the while statement. |
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| Files on a file system that can be viewed
(read) by any user. For example: files residing on Web servers can only be
viewed by Internet users if their permissions have been set to world
readable. |
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| An object that encapsulates and delegates to
another object to alter its interface or behavior in some way. |
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| World Wide Web. The web of systems and the
data in them that is the Internet. See also Internet. |
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| Extensible Markup Language. A markup language
that allows you to define the tags (markup) needed to identify the data and
text in XML documents. |
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