I have an HTML form that I want a user to fill out, and then send by pressing a button. Is there a way to have that button run a java program with all the HTML input as parameters? I looked into this a bit, and most people recommended servlets. Is there a way to do this without a servlet?
Edit: I'm not trying to use a servlet because of restrictions.
If you have a restriction against running a servlet you're pretty much out of luck in terms of using java. You could use a JSP, but that's just a servlet at the end of the day. You could use javascript to pop-up a mail-to with the form parameters entered as the body of the email but that would assume the user has a mail program configured. You could use some service like http://www.emailmeform.com/ (I have no idea if this one is good, I just googled it...).
Check out Java Web Start, might be what you're looking for.
Are you running the java client-side or server-side? The two posted answers are client-side answers. As for server-side, the tutorial here might help, depending on your server.
Related
my main Problem I is that I'm new to this topic and don't know how to successfully google it.
I have a Java-program up and running which is just console-based (no GUI). I want to have a browser interface for it. I want to know how to:
Make a Link on a HTML-Page so that it calls a method in the java-program when clicked
print text from the java-program to the Html Page
enter Strings in a Input field and pass them to the java program
Simple exaample: A simple page with one input field, one "submit"-button and one text field. I enter a name, press submit, the java code gets the string, manipulates it, passes it back to the html page where it is displayed.
The question might seem simple but I need a place to start. Any tutorial link would be very welcomed.
Cheers
Google for Java Servlet programming for beginners
couple resources:
http://www.journaldev.com/1877/java-servlet-tutorial-with-examples-for-beginners
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tkFRGdUgCsE
I strongly recommend to study Java 2 Standard Edition before dealing with servlets.
You need to deeply understand how does the core java work, and only then approach to more complex technologies.
Good luck.
This is my first time working with Java and tomcat and I'm a little confused about how everything fits together - I've googled endlessly but can't seem to wrap my head around a few concepts.
I have completed a Java program that outputs bufferedImages. My goal is to eventually get these images to display on a webpage.
I'm having trouble understanding how my java file (.java) which is currently running in NetBeans interacts with a servlet and/or JSP.
Ideally, a servlet or JSP (not 100% clear on how either of those works. I mostly understand the syntax by looking at various examples, however) could get my output (the bufferedImages) when the program runs and the HTML file could somehow interact with whatever they are doing so that the images could be displayed on the webage. I'm not sure if this is possible. If anyone could suggest a general order of going about things, that would be awesome.
In every example/tutorial i find, no one uses .java files - there are .classes in the WEB-INF folder -- it doesn't seem like people are using full on java programs. However, I need my .java program to run so that I can retrieve the output and use it on the webapp.
Any general guidance would be greatly appreciated!
I think this kind of documentation is sadly lacking; too many think that an example is an explanation, and for all the wonderful things you can get out of an example, sometimes an explanation is not one of them. I'm going to attempt to explain some of the overall concepts you mentioned; they aren't going to help you solve your buffered image display problem directly, unfortunately.
Tomcat and other programs like it are "web servers"; these are programs that accept internet connections from other computers and return information in a particular format. When you enter a "www" address in a browser, the string in that address eventually ends up (as a "request") at a web server, which then returns you a web page (also called a "response"). Tomcat, Apache, Jetty, JBoss, and WebSphere are all similar programs that do this sort of thing. In the original form of the world-wide-web, the request string represented a file on the server machine, and the web server's job was to return that (html) file for display in the browser.
A Servlet is a kind of java program that runs on some web servers. The servlet itself is a java class with methods defined by the javax.servlet.Servlet interface. In webservers that handle servlets, someone familiar with the configuration files can instruct the web server program to accept certain requests and, instead of returning an HTML file (or whatever) from the server, to instead execute the servlet code. A servlet, by its nature, returns content itself - think of a program that outputs HTML and you're on the right track.
But it turns out to be a pain to output complete HTML from a program -- there's a tedious amount of HTML that doesn't have much to do with the "heavy lifting" for which you need a programming language of some sort. You have to have Java (or some language) to make database inquiries, filter results, etc., but you don't really need Java to put in the and the hundreds of other tags that a modern web page needs.
So a JavaServerPage (JSP) is a special kind of hybrid, a combination of HTML and things related to servlets. You CAN put java code directly in a JSP file, but it is usually considered better to use html-like 'tags' which are then interpreted by a "JSP compiler" and turned into a servlet. So the creator of the JSP page learns how to use these tags, which are (if correctly constructed) more logical for web page creators than the java programming language is, and in fact doesn't have to be a programmer at all. So a programmer, working with this content-oriented person, creates tags for the page to use to describe how it wants its page to look, then the programmer does the programming and the content-person creates the web pages with it.
For your specific problem, we'll need more detail to help you. Do you envision this program running and using some information provided by the user as part of his request to generate the images? Or are the images generated once and now you just need to display them? I think that's a topic for another question, actually.
This ought to be enough to get you started. I would now suggest the wikipedia articles on these things to get more details, and good luck getting your head around the concepts. I hope this has helped.
This addendum provided after a comment you made about wanting to do a slideshow.
An important web programming concept is the client-server and request-response nature of it. In the traditional, non-Javascript web environment, the client (read browser) sends a request to the server, and the server sends back bytes. There is no ongoing connection between the two computers after the stream of bytes finishes, and there are restrictions on how long that stream of bytes can continue. Additionally, outside of this request and response, the server usually has no capability to send anything to the client unless the client requests it; the client 'drives' the exchange of data.
So a 'slideshow', for instance, where the server periodically sends bytes representing an additional image, is not the way HTML works (or was meant to work). You could do one under the user's control: the user presses a button for each next picture, the browser sends a request for the next picture and it appears in the place where the previous one was. That fits the request-response paradigm.
Now, the effect of an automatic slideshow is possible using Javascript. Javascript, based on Java but otherwise unrelated, is a scripting language; it is part of an HTML page, is downloaded with the page to the browser, and it runs in the browser's environment (as opposed to a JSP/servlet, which executes on the server). You can write a timer in Javascript, and it can wait N seconds and send another request to the server (for another picture or whatever). Javascript has its own rules, etc., but even so I think it a good idea to keep in mind that you aren't just doing HTML any more.
If a slideshow is what you are after, then you don't need JSP at all. You can create an HTML page with places for the picture being displayed, labels and text and etc., buttons for stopping the slideshow and so forth, in HTML, and Javascript for requesting additional pictures.
You COULD use JSP to create the page, and it might help you depending on how complex the page is, but it isn't going to help you with an essential function: getting the next picture for the slideshow. When the browser requests a JSP page:
the request goes to the server,
the server determines the page you want and that it is a JSP page,
the server compiles that page to a servlet if it hasn't already,
the servlet runs, producing HTML output according to the tags now compiled into Java,
the server returns HTML to the browser.
Then the server is done, and more bytes won't go to the browser until another request is made.
Again, I hope this has helped. Your example of a slideshow has revealed some basic concepts that need to be understood about web programming, servers, HTML, JSPs, and Javascript, and I wish you luck on your journey through them all. And if you come to think of it all as a bit more convoluted than it seems it needed to be, well, you won't be the first.
You can create a JSP that invokes a method in your Java class to retrieve the BufferedImage. Then you must set the content type to the adequate image type:
response.setContentType()
The tricky part is that you must print the image from the JSP, so you have to call:
response.getOutputStream()
from your JSP, and with that OutputStream you must pass the bytes of your BufferedImage.
Note that in that JSP you'll not be able to print out HTML, only the image.
I'm not sure where you need more clarification, as it seems you're a bit confused about the concepts.
BTW.: A JSP is just a servlet that has an easier syntax to write HTML and Java code together.
Can I display a website like wikipedia, google or etc. in my Java applet? I am looking for something like WebBrowser component in C#. Does anyone know how to achieve this?
Take a look at those two answers:
answer 1
answer 2
There are several browser components, and you can see Best Java/Swing browser component? here on SO for some discussion on the "best".
A thought aside - since an applet is already in a web browser, it might be better to bridge to get the browser to display the website you want in, say, an <iframe>, rather than load a browser into a browser.
Swing supports basic HTML (I think version 2.0 or so). So, you can try to use it.
Also there are a several good pure java fully functional HTML browsers.
The question is: why? Java applet runs into browser that knows to show HTML pages. You can easily cause applet to show HTML page into the native browser where it is running now.
Although I've been programming for a few years I've only really dabbled in the web side of things, it's been more application based for computers up until now. I was wondering, in java for example, what library defined function or self defined function I would use to have a program launch a web browser to a certain site? Also as an extension to this how could I have it find a certain field in the website like a search box for instance (if it wasnt the current target of the cursor) and then populate it with a string and submit it to the server? (maybe this is a kind of find by ID scenario?!)
Also, is there a way to control whethere this is visible or not to the user. What I mean is, if I want to do something as a background task whilst the user carries on using the program, I will want the program to be submitting data to a webpage without the whole visual side of things that would interrupt the user?
This may be basic but like I say, I've never tried my hand at it so perhaps if someone could just provide some rough code outlines I'd really appreciate it.
Many thanks
I think Selenium might be what you are looking for.
Selenium allows you to start a Web browser, launch it to a certain website and interact with it. Also, there is a Java API (and a lot of other languages, by the way) allowing you to control the launched browser from a Java application.
There are some tweaking to do, but you can also launch Selenium in background, using a headless Web browser.
as i understand it you want to submit data to a server via the excisting webinterface?
in that case you need to find out how the URL for the request is build and then make a http-call using the corresponding URL
i advice reading this if it involves a POST submit
I am working on an application in Linux which will interfaces with hardware. One of the requirements is to create the GUI in Web-browser . the application will be c++ based. I m not familiar with web realted stuff so i want to know Is it possible to do such a thing (currently it's a console application take input from txt file/cmd line). gui will be simple using button and showing output messages on browser from the application. i want to know which technologies/languages are involved and how can it be done. some of the idea i read but havn't found anything concrete yet. if u have any idea about these or a better suggestion please share
run the app in background and communicate with browser ?
call library functions directly from browser ?
any other idea ?
I would start by setting up a regular HTTP server, like lighttp or Apache httpd.
You say you already have a command line program that does the actual work - As a first step, I would reuse that, and configure the web server to call your program using CGI - see forexample http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/howto/cgi.html for apache
Finally, I'd pick some javascript framework like jQuery or YUI with Ajax capabilities to do requests to the server to call the CGI script from within a webpage. You could also create a form-based web application without ajax or any framework, but that would require you to stuff all kinds of logic in your program to generate HTML pages. By using Ajax, you can leave the command line application as is, and parse any responses it gives with javascript, and then use that to dynamically change the webpage in a way that would make sense to the user.
If this all works, then I would try to figure out how to package all these components. Perhaps you just want to create a simple archive with all the programs inside, or maybe you want to go as far as actually embedding the webserver in your program. Alternatively, you may want to do it the other way around and rewrite your program as an ISAPI module that you can plug into your webserver. Or if that's not integrated enough still you could write your own (partial) HTTP server. That's really up to you (I'd probably spend time and energy on searching for the leanest, meanest existing open source http serverr and use that instead)
At any rate, the prior steps won't be lost work. Most likely, developing the web page is going form a substantial part of the work, so I would probably create a quick and dirty working solution first using the age-old CGI trick, and then develop the webpage to my satisfaction. At that point you can already have an acceptable distributable solution by simply putting all programs in a single archive (of course you would have to tweak the webserver's configuration too, like changing the default port so it won't interfere with existing webservers.) Only after that I would spend time on creating a more integrated fancy solution.
I ended up using Wt though I'd update for future reference.
These are how I thought of doing this, in order of complexity for me:
Create a simple server-side-language (PHP/Python) website that can communicate with (ie launch and process the return of) your application
Modify your application to have a built-in webserver that just punched out HTML (command line parameters taken through the URL)
Modify the app to publish JSON and use javascript on a simple HTML page to pull it in.
You could write a Java applet (as you've tagged this thread) but I think you'd be wasting time. This can be quite simple if you're willing to spend 10 minutes looking up a few simple commands.
After 12 years, web browser-based GUI started to appear, WebUI is one of them.