Yes it does. That is how client side validation of html control is possible using javascript
Yes. Kind of. In HTML 4 you can change the location, height, width or opacity of an element on the page after it has loaded. I have only done this with things like div and image tags, but it might work with all elements, depending on the browser. In HTML 5 you should be able to do crazy things like rotate and stretch elements in javascript too.
Scripts generally Hold the Extension of the File your are looking at, so in order to find a file on your computer you could try:Searching you're computer for the extension of the script (.js, .html, .css etc)Looking in a few folders for the icon of you're web sweet (eg Dream weaver or Front Page)If you are asking how do I run Java script Locally, then simply open it from a local version and as long as the files are in the same folder layout it should work fine.
"No, web portals do not absolutely require java script to work. Many web portals use adobe flash player and work well with this software."
JSP is a Java-based technology used specifically in order to help software developers create dynamic web pages; Java-Script is based on Java, but was created in order to allow non-programmers the ability to work with it easily.JSP must be compiled in Java byte-code in order to function properly; Java-Script is a Java language of a different dialect, and does not need to be directly translated into byte-code
Platform independence refers to the fact that java compiled code (byte code) can execute on any operating system. A programme is written in a language that can be understood by humans. It could contain words, phrases, or other information that the system doesn't understand.... The Java Byte Code is the intermediate representation in Java. To learn more about data science please visit- Learnbay.co
Javascript can change how HTML will work, alike how CSS makes HTML look flashy.
You would not need JavaScript to include an image. <img> in HTML can do the work of including.
Nope. Not the way I look at it. I would have used java script in web design for some graphic work but java is the king and I also heard that java script really is not all the same now days. But I would say "NO" anyhow. Cheers linny
There are some: HTML, which isn't really an alternative, but is another, simpler script-writing language, Java, which is much more complicated and can also work for stuf offline, and Python which is like Java. J0E
You have to download java script run
JSP and HTML are similar in some way or other. JSP is one which has work on Java Programming as well.
No. HTTP is HyperText Transfer Protocol, which is the protocol that web pages work on. HTML needs HTTP for it to work. HTTP is not code for a web page; it is not HTML.
As long as there is support for it, Javascript will work on all browsers and all Operating Systems
No HTML can be written in a simple text file and saved as .html.
Yes. Kind of. In HTML 4 you can change the location, height, width or opacity of an element on the page after it has loaded. I have only done this with things like div and image tags, but it might work with all elements, depending on the browser. In HTML 5 you should be able to do crazy things like rotate and stretch elements in javascript too.
as soon as you can work a computer you are old enough to make a website. there are some tools and programming languages you might want to learn before attempting a website. Adobe Dreamweaver is a nice tool to begin with, Java Script and HTML are good languages to learn as well.
Converting PHP code into Java code would not work correctly; The two languages work in two completely different ways, rendering such a tool practically useless.