Book Image

D Web Development

By : Kai Nacke
Book Image

D Web Development

By: Kai Nacke

Overview of this book

D is a programming language with C-like syntax and static typing. The vibe.d framework builds on powerful D concepts like template meta-programming and compile-time function execution to provide an easy-to-use environment for web applications. The combination of a feature-rich web programming framework with a language compiling to native code solves two common issues in web development today: it accelerates your development and it results in fast, native web applications. Learning the vibe.d framework before you start your application will help you to choose the right features to reach your goal. This book guides you through all aspects of web development with D and the vibe.d framework. Covering the popular operating systems today, this guide starts with the setup of your development system. From the first Hello World-style application you will move on to building static web pages with templates. The concise treatment of web forms will give you all the details about form handling and web security. Using the abstractions of the web framework you will learn how to easily validate user input. Next, you will add database access to your application, providing persistent storage for your data. Building on this foundation, you will expose your component and integrate other components via REST. Learning about the internals of vibe.d you will be able to use low-level techniques such as raw TCP access. The vibe.d concepts can also be used for GUI clients, which is the next topic that you will learn. vibe.d is supported by an active community, which adds new functionality. This comprehensive guide concludes with an overview of the most useful vibe.d extensions and where to find them. It also shows you how to integrate these extensions in your application. The concepts are always illustrated with source code, giving you an insight into how to apply them in your application.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
D Web Development
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Defining the principles of the World Wide Web


As soon as computers were networked, people created binary protocols to execute code on a remote computer. The disadvantage of these Remote Procedure Call (RPC) protocols is the system dependency. Due to the binary nature, it is not easy to get a remote procedure call right: the size of data types, endianness, and alignment may be different on the target machine. With the success of the WWW, the idea of services appeared. A service provides some functionality, for example, retrieving the stock price at NASDAQ in real time. Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) was created. SOAP is based on XML and, therefore, enables structured data exchange in heterogeneous networks. Web Service Description Language (WSDL) was created to describe the services, again in XML.

The combination of SOAP and WSDL is used to look up services and generate language bindings for them. This works very well, but there are drawbacks. SOAP is designed to be independent of the...