A reference that web application developers should find useful in helping to create effective Active Server Pages. It focuses on how features are used in a real application and highlights little-known or undocumented features. The book also includes an overview of the interaction between the latest release of Internet Information Server (version 5) and ASP 3.0, with an introduction to the IIS object model and the objects it comprises. The examples shown in this section and throughout the book are illustrated in VBScript. The main components of this book are an introduction to Active Server Pages and a brief overview of the ASP application paradigm with examples in VBScript. Also included is an introduction to Microsoft's Internet Information Server 5.0, the IIS object model, and the objects that it comprises; an object reference - each object is discussed in the following manner: descriptions, properties, collections, methods, events, accessory files/required DLLs, and remarks, including real-world uses, tips and tricks, and author's experience (where applicable).
The objects - Application, Response, Request, Server, Session, ObjectContext, and ASPError, as well as ASP Directives, Global.ASA, and Server-Side all follow this paradigm; component reference - this section follows the same paradigm found in "Object Reference". The discussion covers all of the additional components included with IIS, such as ActiveX Data Objects, the Ad Rotator, the Browser capabilities component, the File System Object, and more. Appendixes. Gives examples in one or two objects and components using Perl, REXX, and Python in ASP. Like other books in the "In a Nutshell" series this book offers the facts, including critical background information, in a no-nonsense manner that users should find valuable. It is a detailed reference that enables even experienced web developers to advance their ASP applications to new levels.
Author Biography:
A. Keyton Weissinger is a senior web developer for the Business Consulting Knowledge Management Group within Arthur Anderson (AA), LLP. His role has been designing and developing ASP and Index Server. He has also worked with Visual Basic (client/server apps, dlls, and ActiveX controls) and has introductory knowledge of Java and Visual C++. Previously, Keyton worked at the ExecuTrain Corporation where he was responsible for the programming and writing behind their Visual Basic 4.0 courses.