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The  java   programming  language is becoming more and more popular each day. It is the language without which one cannot even hope to a land a job these

days. But has somebody even wondered how this language came about? There are many stories about, many books have been written. Here is my version (not approved by Sun Microsystems).

The  java   programming  language originated in Indonesia. It was meant to be used

by the tourists that visit that country each year. Why would tourists want to use computer? Well, these are no ordinary tourists. They are rich tourists. Have

they not been rich, they would not travel half way around the world to visit this

place. Most people would be content to see just what is available near by. For

example, if you are a texan living in Dallas, you will visit the stockyards or may be the

trinity river park. If you live in New Orleans area, you would see st. mary's

bayou. Once in your lifetime, one will probably visit Hawaii or Niagara. But

going to Indonesia and its islands, Bali,  Java , etc is not for the ordinary

people. Anyway, coming back to the question why these tourists need to use

computer programs. They go there not just to have fun and also get some work

done in a fun atmosphere as these people are very important people.

From the very start  java  was supposed to be computer independent. That means if

you write a  program  in  java  in one computer, it should run in all computers.

This was necessary because tourists bring all kinds of computers with them.

Some bring

Windows machine, some Apple mackintosh. Some of the affluent ones bring

Sun server workstations or even a super computer.

Before starting to create  java  they also sought to see if there have similar

stuff done already. Even though they could find none, they found they can use

lots of feature from some existing languages. One such language they found was C++. C++ was an advancement over the language called C. In fact, ideas of

C++ was already hidden in C. In that language, one can increment a variable,

say i, by applying the ++ operator e.g. i++. This would increase the value of

the variable i by one. If i had a value of 5, it would make it 6, etc.

What a vision!

Anyway, coming back to C++, it made an important advancement over C by introducing the idea of a class. To understand class, one has to undestand

structure which was already used in C. The structure is a group of variables.

For example, you have a name, an address, age etc. for any person. In stead of

using them separately, in C one can group them together and call it a person.

The creator of C++ said there is no need to expose these variables (name, address, etc) to the outside world. They said these details should be hidden

from the outside world. They called this concept encapsulation.

Another important

contribution of C++ was the concept of inheritance. This concept can be best

explained by example. Let's go back to the example of the person. A person is

very general concept. There can be many different kinds of persons, e.g doctors,

lawyers, teachers, or just a bum! But each of these people have a name, an address, age etc. Even a bum has all these. The creator of C++ thought one can

define a base class call person and other classes can be derived from it. In

plain english, this would mean, a doctor is special kind of person, lawyer is

another special kind of person. Now the common attributes of all these kinds of people can be put in

the person class and special attributes can be put in the derived classes, e.g.

hospital for the doctor, court for the lawyer, and nothing for the bum.

But C++ was still complex with things like pointers, memory leak and multiple

inheritance. The pointer

concept was taken from C and it was very messy! The pointer is special type of variable

that points to other variables. Since there was no guidelines as to how to use

these pointers, it was very easy loose track of them. In a typical two thousand lines program, one would frequently end up with hundredes of pointers pointing

to thousands, some of them are pointers and some just plain variables. Needless

to say this made a large program extremely difficult to read and when the

programmer left for another company, they would have no other choice than

to just throw away his program! It was sometimes necessary to do this even

when the programmer was around and very much alive. This is because the pointers he created inside his program had taken a life of their own and defy

every attempt to predict how the program should behave.

Memory management was also another weak point of C and C++. The programmer was

responsible for cleaning up the memory their program would allocate and use.

Failure to do so will result in a crash of the whole computer.

Multiple inheritance, though sparingly used, was

another feature of C++ which made a programmer's life miserable. It, however,

had its use, especially in job interviews. This one question, they thought,

helped them separate the wheat from the chaff.

But C++ still had some nice and simple features, like inheritance, encapsulation, etc. They are something one can describe in plain english,

something one can explain to a layman. So the creator of  java  decided to take

the good features of inherience, encapsulation, and polymorphism from C++,

while discarding the bad features such as multiple inherience, pointers etc.

The memory management was

improved in  java  where the programmer will not be held responsible for memory management. They

can clean up after themselves if they want to get extra credit, but they do not

need to. Needless to say all these was great news to the tourists in Indonesia!

 Java  introduced lot of clarity in notations too. For example, in C++ they

would say class doctor:person to mean doctor is derived from person.

It is obviously very cryptic. The same situation can be expressed

in  java  as class doctor extends person , which is much easier to understand. But there are few awkward stuff in  java  too especially when someone

says class bum extends person (my last bum joke)!

 Java  made an important contribution in the graphical user interface (GUI) area.

C++ was really lacking in expertise here. They visual C++, but worked only on

windows environment. But it did not work in UNIX systems or mackintoshes. Just

like other features of  java , this was also supposed to be platform independent.

This was further necessary because one can put some little GUI on a web page which can be views over the internet. And one cannot control what kind of computers other will have.

After a while, it was necessary to call programs from one computer to another

computer. To do this, they created J2EE. I am not sure how they came

up with the name J2EE. The 'J' of J2EE, of course, means " Java ", and I can be

reasonably sure '2' stands for 'To'. But I do not know what the 'EE' part is all

about, probably some kind of extension.

Or at this point they ran out of names to think of. So they decided to

have one of those just another vague acronyms.

If you would like, you can also visit my home page.

Copyright © 2003 Gautam Dev. All rights reserved





Source by Gautam Dev

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