久久中文视频-久久中文网-久久中文亚洲国产-久久中文字幕久久久久-亚洲狠狠成人综合网-亚洲狠狠婷婷综合久久久久

Rss & SiteMap

曙海教育集團論壇 http://www.bjzhda.cn

曙海教育集團論壇
共1 條記錄, 每頁顯示 10 條, 頁簽: [1]
[瀏覽完整版]

標題:Microsoft .NET vs. J2EE:

1樓
wangxinxin 發表于:2010-12-15 11:13:20

What exactly is the .NET platform [and] how does the .NET architecture measure up against J2EE?

Java runs on any platform with a Java VM. C# only runs in Windows for the foreseeable future.

.NET and J2EE offer pretty much the same laundry list of features, albeit in different ways.

By allowing cross-language component interactions, .NET is enfranchising Perl, Eiffel, Cobol, and other programmers.

.NET is a good thing for those of you committed to Microsoft architectures.

.NET will undoubtedly become the default development environment for Microsoft platforms.

However, several of the goals of the .NET platform are fairly lofty and not at all guaranteed to fly, at least not in the short term.

It would be easy to dismiss .NET as more Microsoft marketing-ware and continue on your merry way. But don't.

[Microsoft is] fighting Java and open source initiatives on their own terms, putting their own spin on "open" and attempting to directly address the needs of developers.

If you consider yourself an evangelist for Java or open source platforms, then the nature of the war is changing. Be prepared.

Microsoft has put a stake in the ground with SOAP, and they're pushing hard to put something understandable and useful in the hands of developers. J2EE proponents need to do the same with their platform.

Even if you don't write code dedicated to Microsoft platforms, you have probably heard by now about Microsoft .NET, Microsoft's latest volley in their campaign against all things non-Windows. If you've read the media spin from Microsoft, or browsed through the scant technical material available on the MSDN site, or even if you attended the Microsoft Professional Developers' Conference (where the .NET platform was officially "launched"), you're probably still left with at least two big questions:

And, if you think more long-term, you might have a third question rattling around your head:

  • What can we learn from the .NET architecture about pushing the envelope of enterprise software development?

The .NET framework is at a very early stage in its lifecycle, and deep details are still being eked out by the Microsoft .NET team. But we can, nevertheless, get fairly decent answers to these questions from the information that's already out there.

What is it?

Current ruminations about .NET in various forums are reminiscent of the fable of the three blind men attempting to identify an elephant: It's perceived as very different things, depending on your perspective. Some see .NET as Microsoft's next-generation Visual Studio development environment. Some see it as yet another new programming language (C#). Some see it as a new data-exchange and messaging framework, based on XML and SOAP. In reality, .NET wants to be all of these things, and a bit more.

First, let's get some concrete details. Here's one cut at an itemized list of the technical components making up the .NET platform:

  • C#, a "new" language for writing classes and components, that integrates elements of C, C++, and Java, and adds additional features, like metadata tags, related to component development.

  • A "common language runtime", which runs bytecodes in an Internal Language (IL) format. Code and objects written in one language can, ostensibly, be compiled into the IL runtime, once an IL compiler is developed for the language.

  • A set of base components, accessible from the common language runtime, that provide various functions (networking, containers, etc.).

  • ASP+, a new version of ASP that supports compilation of ASPs into the common language runtime (and therefore writing ASP scripts using any language with an IL binding).

  • Win Forms and Web Forms, new UI component frameworks accessible from Visual Studio.

  • ADO+, a new generation of ADO data access components that use XML and SOAP for data interchange.

How do .NET and J2EE compare?

As you can see, the .NET platform has an array of technologies under its umbrella. Microsoft is ostensibly presenting these as alternatives to other existing platforms, like J2EE and CORBA, in order to attract developers to the Windows platform. But how do the comparisons play out item-by-item? One way to lay out the alternatives between .NET and J2EE is shown in the following table:

Microsoft.NET J2EE Key differentiators
C# programming language Java programming language C# and Java both derive from C and C++. Most significant features (e.g., garbage collection, hierarchical namespaces) are present in both. C# borrows some of the component concepts from JavaBeans (properties/attributes, events, etc.), adds some of its own (like metadata tags), but incorporates these features into the syntax differently.

Java runs on any platform with a Java VM. C# only runs in Windows for the foreseeable future.

C# is implicitly tied into the IL common language runtime (see below), and is run as just-in-time (JIT) compiled bytecodes or compiled entirely into native code. Java code runs as Java Virtual Machine (VT) bytecodes that are either interpreted in the VM or JIT compiled, or can be compiled entirely into native code.

.NET common components (aka the ".NET Framework SDK") Java core API High-level .NET components will include support for distributed access using XML and SOAP (see ADO+ below).
Active Server Pages+ (ASP+) Java ServerPages (JSP) ASP+ will use Visual Basic, C#, and possibly other languages for code snippets. All get compiled into native code through the common language runtime (as opposed to being interpreted each time, like ASPs). JSPs use Java code (snippets, or JavaBean references), compiled into Java bytecodes (either on-demand or batch-compiled, depending on the JSP implementation).
IL Common Language Runtime Java Virtual Machine and CORBA IDL and ORB .NET common language runtime allows code in multiple languages to use a shared set of components, on Windows. Underlies nearly all of .NET framework (common components, ASP+, etc.).

Java's Virtual Machine spec allows Java bytecodes to run on any platform with a compliant JVM.

CORBA allows code in multiple languages to use a shared set of objects, on any platform with an ORB available. Not nearly as tightly integrated into J2EE framework.

Win Forms and Web Forms Java Swing Similar web components (e.g., based on JSP) not available in Java standard platform, some proprietary components available through Java IDEs, etc.

Win Forms and Web Forms RAD development supported through the MS Visual Studio IDE - no other IDE support announced at this writing. Swing support available in many Java IDEs and tools.

ADO+ and SOAP-based Web Services JDBC, EJB, JMS and Java XML Libraries (XML4J, JAXP) ADO+ is built on the premise of XML data interchange (between remote data objects and layers of multi-tier apps) on top of HTTP (AKA, SOAP). .NET's web services in general assume SOAP messaging models. EJB, JDBC, etc. leave the data interchange protocol at the developer's discretion, and operate on top of either HTTP, RMI/JRMP or IIOP.

The comparisons in this table only scratch the surface. Here's an executive summary of .NET vs. J2EE:

Features: .NET and J2EE offer pretty much the same laundry of list of features, albeit in different ways.

Portability: The .NET core works on Windows only but theoretically supports development in many languages (once sub-/supersets of these languages have been defined and IL compilers have been created for them). Also, Net's SOAP capabilities will allow components on other platforms to exchange data messages with .NET components. While a few of the elements in .NET, such as SOAP and its discovery and lookup protocols, are provided as public specifications, the core components of the framework (IL runtime environment, ASP+ internals, Win Forms and Web Forms component "contracts", etc.) are kept by Microsoft, and Microsoft will be the only provider of complete .NET development and runtime environments. There has already been some pressure by the development community for Microsoft to open up these specifications, but this would be counter to Microsoft's standard practices.

J2EE, on the other hand, works on any platform with a compliant Java VM and a compliant set of required platform services (EJB container, JMS service, etc., etc.). All of the specifications that define the J2EE platform are published and reviewed publicly, and numerous vendors offer compliant products and development environments. But J2EE is a single-language platform. Calls from/to objects in other languages are possible through CORBA, but CORBA support is not a ubiquitous part of the platform.

The Bigger Picture

These last points highlight some of the key differentiators between .NET and J2EE, and point towards Microsoft's real play here. Microsoft is doing two very notable things with .NET: It is opening up a channel to developers in other programming languages, and it is opening up a channel to non-.NET components by integrating XML and SOAP into their messaging scheme.

By allowing cross-language component interactions, .NET is enfranchising Perl, Eiffel, Cobol, and other programmers by allowing them to play in the Microsoft sandbox. Devotees of these languages are particularly amenable to gestures like this, since for the most part they have felt somewhat disenfranchised and marginalized in the Microsoft/Sun/Open Source wars. And by using XML and SOAP in their component messaging layer, Microsoft is bolstering their diplomatic face and adding an element of openness to their platform, providing ammunition against claims of proprietary behavior.

What's the correct response?

For Microsoft developers:

.NET is a good thing for those of you committed to Microsoft architectures. ASP+ is better than ASP, ADO+ is better, but different, than ADO and DCOM, C# is better than C and C++. The initial version of .NET won't be real until sometime in 2001, so you have some time to prepare, but this will undoubtedly become the default development environment for Microsoft platforms. And if you're developing within the Microsoft development framework now, you will undoubtedly benefit from adopting elements of the .NET framework into your architectures.

However, several of the goals of the .NET platform are fairly lofty and not at all guaranteed to fly, at least not in the short term. The IL common language runtime, for example, has some fairly significant hurdles to overcome before it has any real payoff for developers. Each language that wants to integrate with the component runtime has to define a subset/superset of the language that maps cleanly into and out of the IL runtime, and has to define constructs that provide the component metadata that IL requires. Then compilers (x-to-IL and IL-to-x) will have to be developed to both compile language structures (objects, components, etc.) into IL component bytecodes, and also generate language-specific interfaces to

共1 條記錄, 每頁顯示 10 條, 頁簽: [1]

Copyright © 2000 - 2009 曙海教育集團
Powered By 曙海教育集團 Version 2.2
Processed in .03125 s, 2 queries.
主站蜘蛛池模板: 88av视频在线观看 | 二区久久国产乱子伦免费精品 | 国产欧美日韩一区二区三区在线 | 香蕉久久夜色精品国产2020 | 日韩亚洲人成网站在线播放 | 一级黄色α片 | 中文在线免费视频 | 91热久久免费频精品动漫99 | 国产剧情一区二区 | 亚洲高清国产拍精品影院 | 免费在线观看的毛片 | 欧洲色老头 | 日本加勒比高清一本大道 | 久草在线视频在线观看 | www伊人| 五月色婷婷琪琪综合伊人 | 国产精品久久久久久吹潮 | 国产一级高清 | aaa欧美| 美国三级毛片 | 成年视频国产免费观看 | 精品成人免费视频 | 手机看片日韩国产一区二区 | 午夜不卡在线 | 在线观看中文字幕国产 | 午夜日本一区二区三区 | 成人国产一区二区三区精品 | 香港经典毛片a免费观看 | 在线a人片免费观看国产 | 亚洲精品视频在线观看免费 | 久久成人国产精品免费 | 免费一级肉体全黄毛片 | 国产精品成人一区二区三区 | 国产三级精品美女三级 | a级毛片在线视频免费观看 a级免费 | 免费观看毛片的网站 | 国产日韩在线看 | 国产成人精品免费视频大全办公室 | 精品国产美女福利到在线不卡 | 亚洲精品一区二区三区四 | 激情欧美一区二区三区 |