Books: Languages: Java: Lecture 1st
INTRODUCTION TO JAVA
COMPUTER
SCIENCE
4th Semester
M ASIF
MEHMOOD
Lecturer
in Computer Science
History of JAVA
•Java, having been developed in 1991, James
Gosling from Sun Microsystems and his team began designing .
• Gosling's new language needed to
be accessible by a variety of computer processors.
• In 1994, he realized
that such a language would be ideal for use with web browsers and Java's
connection to the internet began.
• In 1995, Netscape Incorporated released its latest
version of the Netscape browser which was capable of running Java programs.
Why is it called
Java?
The
original name of this language was Oak, until it was discovered that a
programming language already existed that was named Oak.
•Why Oak? Oak
is a symbol of strength and chosen as a national tree of many countries like
U.S.A., France, Germany, Romania etc.
•1995, Oak was renamed as "Java" because
it was already a trademark by Oak Technologies.
Features of Java
There is given many features of
java. They are also known as java buzzwords. The Java Features given below
•Simple
•Object-Oriented
•Platform independent
•Secured
•Robust
•Architecture neutral
•Portable
•Dynamic
•Interpreted
•High Performance
•Multithreaded
•Distributed
•
Features of Java simple
•
Java language is simple because:
syntax is based on C++
• removed
many confusing and/or rarely-used features e.g., explicit pointers, operator
overloading etc.
• No
need to remove unreferenced objects because there is Automatic Garbage
Collection in java
Object-oriented :
Object-oriented means we
organize our software as a combination of different types of objects that
incorporates both data and behaviour.
OOPs is a methodology that simplify software development and
maintenance by providing some rules.
Basic concepts
of OOPs are:
·
•Object
·
•Class
·
•Inheritance
·
•Polymorphism
·
•Abstraction
·
•Encapsulation
·
Platform Independent:
A platform is the hardware or software environment in
which a program runs. There are two types of platforms software-based and
hardware-based. Java provides software-based platform. The Java platform
differs from most other platforms in the sense that it's a software-based
platform that runs on top of other hardware-based platforms.
It has two
components:
1.
Runtime Environment
2.
API(Application Programming Interface)
Platform Independent:
Java code can be run on multiple platforms e.g.
Windows, Linux, Sun Solaris, Mac/OS etc. Java code
is compiled by the compiler and converted into bytecode. This bytecode is a platform
independent code because it can be run on multiple platforms i.e. Write Once
and Run Anywhere(WORA).
Secured
Java is secured because:
•No
explicit pointer
•Programs
run inside virtual machine sandbox.
Robust
Robust simply means strong. Java uses strong memory
management. There are lack of pointers that avoids security problem. There is
automatic garbage collection in java. There is exception handling and type
checking mechanism in java. All these points makes java robust.
Architecture-neutral:
There is no implementation dependent features
e.g. size of primitive types is set.
Portable:
We may carry the java bytecode to any platform.
High-performance
Java is faster than traditional
interpretation since byte code is "close" to native code still
somewhat slower than a compiled language (e.g., C++)
Distributed
We can create distributed applications in java. RMI and
EJB are used for creating distributed applications. We may access files by
calling the methods from any machine on the internet.
Multi-threaded
A thread is like a separate program, executing
concurrently. We can write Java programs that deal with many tasks at once by
defining multiple threads. The main advantage of multi-threading is that it
shares the same memory. Threads are important for multi-media, Web applications
etc.
Java Basics
•Development
Environments
•Eclipse
•Emacs
•Notepad
and Command Line
What’s Java all about then?
•NOT
the same as JavaScript
•Java
SDK consists of 2 components:
•Java
VM (Virtual Machine)
•Java
API (Application Programming Interface)
+ accompanying documentation
+ accompanying documentation
•If
you alter your code you need to re-compile it before you can run the program
•ONLY
use Java version 2 and above
(Java 1.2/Java 1.3/Java 1.4 etc)
(Java 1.2/Java 1.3/Java 1.4 etc)
Writing your first Java program
•Use
a text editor to write the source code
•Save
it as a .java file
•Compile
it using Java SDK
•
• Compile
in DOS by
Javac
file name.java
java file name
Hello
World
•In
C
int main (int argc,
char** argv) {
printf(“Hello
World!\n”);
return 0;
}/* end main */
•Things
to notice:
• Similar
syntax
• Classes
• System.out.println()
• main is void:
public static void main
•In
Java
public class HelloWorld {
public
static void main (String[] args) {
System.out.println(“Hello
World!”);
}/*
end main */
}//end HelloWorld
How Java Differs from C
•Exclusively
Object-Oriented Language
•EVERYTHING must live in
a class (mostly)
•No Global Variables
•
•No
Pointers
•Also, no ‘*’
‘->’ or ‘&’
operators
•Blessing and a Curse
•Garbage
Collection
•Loss
of Power
•No
Preprocessor (no #include, #define,
etc.)
•No goto statement
•Declare/Define
Variables & Methods anywhere (within a class)
•No struct, enum,
or typedef
•Can’t
overload Operators
•Use new rather
than malloc()
'Hello world' program in
Java
n
class myprog
{
public
static void main(String[] args)
{
System.out.println(“Hello
world!”);
}
}
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