当前位置: 首页 > 图文教程 > 网络编程 > ASP > 把ASP移植到ASP+

ASP
ASP页面随机添加字符实现防复制的代码
ASP中应用事务处理技巧
asp下比较全面的获取IP地址的代码
ASP实现缓存类无错版
asp下实现批量插入数据的方法
asp下用ADODB.Stream代替FSO读取文本文件
asp之基于adodb.stream的文件操作类
自己写的文件操作的function和Sub vb.net dll
kesion科讯V4.0管理员Key工具
asp 获取access系统表,查询等操作代码
asp之字符串函数示例
asp之日期和时间函数示例
ASP 关于动态数据显示页面得锚点
Asp无组件上传进度条解决方案
ASP控制每页打印行数
用ASP实现分级权限控制
ASP在服务器自动解压RAR文件
用ASP实现远程将文件批量改名的代码
在Asp程序中取得表单所有内容的代码
使用ASP实现网站的“目录树”管理的代码

把ASP移植到ASP+


出处:互联网   整理: 软晨网(RuanChen.com)   发布: 2009-11-03   浏览: 218 ::
收藏到网摘: n/a

  Before embarking on the inevitable—and not painless—migration to ASP+, it's best to know what
compatibility issues you'll have to deal with

by Chris Kinsman


  Microsoft is set to release an exciting upgrade to ASP later in 2000. This is a major upgrade unlike the
minor changes from ASP 2.0 to 3.0. Unlike past upgrades, however, this one will not be painless. When they
designed ASP+, Microsoft had to make the hard decision occasionally to break backward compatibility in the
interest of improved functionality and features.
What you need:

ASP+ PDC Preview




At the Professional Developer Conference 2000 ASP+ Development Lead Scott Guthrie mentioned that Microsoft
was guided by the idea that "There is more Internet time ahead of us than behind us." As an ASP developer
with hundreds of thousands of lines of code directly affected by this, I am worried. At the same time, I
sincerely feel that they made the right decision.

Compatibility Issues
What does Microsoft's decision about selective backwards-compatibility mean for you? At the most basic it
means that migrating will require work. All but the most simple pages will likely require changes before
they will run correctly under ASP+. Microsoft has made available a migration path from ASP to ASP+. Both
ASP and ASP+ will run side by side on the same server without interacting. This means that your ASP
applications will continue to run—albeit without taking advantage of new ASP+ functionality—while you
are developing your new ASP+ pages. No modifications have been made to asp.dll, and nothing should break
by installing ASP+.

This side-by-side operability is accomplished by using separate filename extensions for ASP and ASP+. All
ASP+ filename extensions that I have seen so far end in an x (for example, .aspx, .asmx, etc.). The only
exception would be new pagelets (miniature ASP+ pages—more about them later) that use the .aspc
extension. This means that migration will typically entail copying an .asp file to an .aspx file, testing
it, fixing the problems, and then deploying it by relinking the rest of the site to the file with the new
extension.

Microsoft has mentioned that by the time the product ships they hope to have a conversion tool ready which
will point out incompatibilities and, in some instances, fix them for you. This won't fix all
incompatibilities but it will cover the majority. Compatibility issues come in three broad categories: API
changes, semantic changes, and language changes.

API Changes: The first set of compatibility issues arise around changes to the core ASP objects. All of
the arrays are now 0 index based. In the previous versions some arrays were 1 based and others were 0
based. For consistency, all now use a 0 base.

The second change has to do with the return types of certain objects. In ASP, Request,
Request.QueryString, and Request.Form return different results based on what is in them. If I access a
page with the following Url—http://localhost/apichanges.asp?Language=VB&Language=C#—and it contains the
following code:

<%
    ' Writes out: VB, C#
    Response.Write Request.QueryString("Language")

    ' Writes out: VB
    Response.Write Request.QueryString("Language")(1)
%>
then depending on the way I invoke Request.QueryString, I will get differing results. One would have
thought that the first invocation would return a string array, as opposed to a CSV string. ASP+ has
changed this model. Now to get the individual items you must call an explicit method to get access to the
items. Using the same URL as above, the following ASP+ code will provide the same functionality:
<%
    ' Writes out: VB, C#
    Response.Write(Request