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  2. Fully qualified name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fully_qualified_name

    To distinguish a fully qualified name from a regular name, C++, Tcl, Perl and Ruby use two colons (::), and Java uses dots (.), as does Visual Basic .NET. [3] and C#. [4]In Java, ActionScript, [5] and other object-oriented languages the use of the dot is known as "dot syntax". [6]

  3. Namespace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Namespace

    Code from other packages is accessed by prefixing the package name before the appropriate identifier, for example class String in package java.lang can be referred to as java.lang.String (this is known as the fully qualified class name). Like C++, Java offers a construct that makes it unnecessary to type the package name (import).

  4. Java syntax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_syntax

    Packages are a part of a class name and they are used to group and/or distinguish named entities from other ones. Another purpose of packages is to govern code access together with access modifiers. For example, java.io.InputStream is a fully qualified class name for the class InputStream which is located in the package java.io.

  5. Name mangling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Name_mangling

    Name resolution in Java is further complicated at runtime, as fully qualified names for classes are unique only inside a specific classloader instance. Classloaders are ordered hierarchically and each Thread in the JVM has a so-called context class loader, so in cases where two different classloader instances contain classes with the same name ...

  6. Comparison of programming languages (syntax) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_programming...

    The above statements can also be classified by whether they are a syntactic convenience (allowing things to be referred to by a shorter name, but they can still be referred to by some fully qualified name without import), or whether they are actually required to access the code (without which it is impossible to access the code, even with fully ...

  7. Java package - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_package

    A Java package organizes Java classes into namespaces, [1] ... Classes can also be used directly without an import declaration by using the fully qualified name of ...

  8. QName - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QName

    A QName, or qualified name, is the fully qualified name of an element, attribute, or identifier in an XML document. A QName concisely associates the URI of an XML namespace with the local name of an element, attribute, or identifier in that namespace. [1] To make this association, the QName assigns the local name a prefix that corresponds to ...

  9. Fully qualified domain name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fully_qualified_domain_name

    Dot-separated fully qualified domain names are the primarily used form for human-readable representations of a domain name. Dot-separated domain names are not used in the internal representation of labels in a DNS message [7] but are used to reference domains in some TXT records and can appear in resolver configurations, system hosts files, and URLs.