Thanx Dan. I will certainly keep that in mind.
Cheers mate,
L
-----Original Message-----
From: Daniel Koo [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 19 June 2001 02:35
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: newbie: Installing Servlets
Hi there,
once you're comfortable with the basics I suggest you have a look
at the Jakarta Ant project, and the docs in the ROOT webapp in
the basics of using it: ant reduces the amount of work you have
to do moving/copying files into and out of directories.
dan
On Mon, Jun 18, 2001 at 06:47:48PM +0100, LeRoi wrote:
> Yup! That worked. Part of the problem for me is that the book I'm using
to
> learn Java was written just before the Java web server was released to
> Jakarta.
>
> Innyway, you've saved me from lots of work until I need to. I'm I've been
> reading the documentation on deploying an application. For a newbie, it's
a
> bit overwhelming right now just to test a simple example.
>
> Cheer mate!
> LeRoi
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Francis Callo [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: 18 June 2001 18:06
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: newbie: Installing Servlets
>
> Hi,
> if you have a servlet named "HelloWorld"i believe you
> have to put your classes on
> "webapps/examples/WEB-INF/classes/" and access it with
> URL
> "http://localhost:8080/examples/servlet/HelloWorld"
> Let me know if it works. ;)
>
> GUD LUK
> Francis
>
> --- LeRoi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hello!
> >
> > Now that I have Tomcat up and running, it's time
> > that I starting doing some
> > real work. Following a simple example in the book
> > I'm using it says that
> > servlets are installed in the subdirectory
> > "webapps\WEB-INF\servlets". I
> > put my class there (under "examples" directory of
> > Tomcat) and shut down
> > Tomcat and re-started it. Below is the code for
> > textbook example:
> >
> > // Fig. 19.5: HTTPGetServlet.java
> > // Creating and sending a page to the client
> > import javax.servlet.*;
> > import javax.servlet.http.*;
> > import java.io.*;
> >
> > public class HTTPGetServlet extends HttpServlet {
> > public void doGet(HttpServletRequest request,
> > HttpServletResponse
> > response)
> > throws ServletException, IOException
> > {
> > PrintWriter output;
> >
> > response.setContentType("text/html"); // content
> > type
> > output = response.getWriter(); // get writer
> >
> > // create and send HTML page to client
> > StringBuffer buf = new StringBuffer();
> > buf.append("<HTML><HEAD><TITLE>\n");
> > buf.append("A simple Servlet Example\n");
> > buf.append("</TITLE></HEAD><BODY>\n");
> > buf.append("<H1>Welcome to Servlets!</H1>\n");
> > buf.append("</BODY></HTML>");
> > output.println(buf.toString());
> > output.close(); // close PrintWriter stream
> > }
> > }
> >
> > <!-- Fig. 19.6: HTTPGetServlet.html -->
> > <HTML>
> > <HEAD>
> > <TITLE>
> > Servlet HTTP GET Example
> > </TITLE>
> > </HEAD>
> > <BODY>
> > <FORM
> >
> >
> ACTION="http://localhost:8080/servlets/HTTPGetServlet"
> > METHOD="GET">
> > <P>Click the button to have the servlet send
> > an HTML document</P>
> > <INPUT TYPE="submit" VALUE="Get HTML Document">
> > </FORM>
> > </BODY>
> > </HTML>
> >
> > Well, it didn't work. My question is, in order to
> > install this simple
> > servlet does that mean I have to go through all the
> > steps as given in the
> > documentation for "Developing Applications with
> > Tomcat"?
> >
> > Cheers and many thanx in advance,
> > LeRoi
> >
> >
>
>
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<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Computer Science and Engineering, UNSW