Hi!
 
Just remove the package statement from your code.
 
Avais Aziz
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, July 17, 2002 5:34 PM
Subject: Re: Getting started

I'll try that - and again many thanks for your help everyone

I'll sign off and let ye get back to your own things - my basics are wrong and I'll try and remedy that here

Many thanks again and good luck

Angela

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 07/17/02 12:42pm >>>
I guess Angela first go and read about Servlets and then start making a sample code.
Your basics are wrong.

-----Original Message-----
From: Angela McGrenra [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, July 17, 2002 4:28 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Getting started


The code I copied from a SUN site and is as below :-

package sl314.generic;

import javax.servlet.GenericServlet;
import javax.servlet.ServletRequest;
import javax.servlet.ServletResponse;
// Support classes
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.PrintWriter;

public class HelloServlet extends GenericServlet {

  public void service(ServletRequest request,
                      ServletResponse response)
         throws IOException {

    PrintWriter out = response.getWriter();

    // Generate the response
    out.println("Hello, World!");
    out.close();
  }
}

I run it from the following URL:

http://localhost:8080/servlet/HelloServlet

and the .class file is saved in the following directory:

C:\java\jakarta-tomcat-3.3.1\webapps\ROOT\WEB-INF\classes\HelloServlet.class

Reply via email to