Re: C# versus Java for Interactive Images

From:
=?ISO-8859-1?Q?Arne_Vajh=F8j?= <arne@vajhoej.dk>
Newsgroups:
comp.lang.java.programmer
Date:
Sun, 09 Mar 2008 15:04:23 -0400
Message-ID:
<47d434b1$0$90271$14726298@news.sunsite.dk>
Logician wrote:

On Mar 9, 4:54 pm, Lew <l...@lewscanon.com> wrote:

Arne VajhHj wrote:

Logician wrote:

On Mar 9, 3:19 pm, Arne VajhHj <a...@vajhoej.dk> wrote:

Logician wrote:

On Mar 9, 12:48 pm, Andrew Thompson <andrewtho...@gmail.com> wrote:

On Mar 9, 10:16 pm, Logician <sa...@logicians.com> wrote:

I am trying to write an interactive image which presents search
results in a tree structure. I see at many sites Java is used for
interactivion with images.

Do you mean as in 'Java applets embedded
in a web page?'.

I mean either an applet or a servlet, but via the WWW.

Servlets are server side - applets are client side - for all
practical purposes they can not replace each other.

This is a fine distinction (applet and servlet). My question is only -
Do so many people use Java for interactive images because it has
features not available in C#?

My impression is that Flash would be most used for this with Java
applets at a second place.
And C# is not an option because .NET is not installed on all systems
and not available at all for some systems.

Java is at least as rich as C# for server-side implementations of such
functionality. JSP are like .aspx, sort of. Java server-side also integrates
well with scripting languages like Javascript. Libraries based on AJAX, JSF
(Java Server Faces) and other frameworks provide a rich set of graphical and
quasi-graphical interactions, dynamically and statically. The trend is toward
greater cooperation of client-side and server-side actions to make for a rich
experience. One needn't rely on a browser having plugins for Flash, Java or
anything else beyond HTML and Javascript.


Javascript is disabled on several browsers especially on computers
running at large companies (a security measure).


In todays AJAX world browsers with JavaScript disabled would be useless
for so many things, that I would not worry about that.

Arne

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