Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
HTTP Public Key Pinning (HPKP) is an obsolete Internet security mechanism delivered via an HTTP header which allows HTTPS websites to resist impersonation by attackers using misissued or otherwise fraudulent digital certificates. [1]
Therefore, HTTP/1.1 added status codes 303 and 307 to distinguish between the two behaviours. [1]: §15.4 303 See Other (since HTTP/1.1) The response to the request can be found under another URI using the GET method. When received in response to a POST (or PUT/DELETE), the client should presume that the server has received the data and should ...
The {{deprecated code}} template (easiest used from its {} redirect) can be used to indicate, e.g. in template documentation or Wikipedia articles on things like HTML specifications, code that has been deprecated and should not normally be used. It can also be used to indicate other deleted or deprecated material.
JSDoc differs from Javadoc, in that it is specialized to handle JavaScript's dynamic behaviour. [1] An early example using a Javadoc-like syntax to document JavaScript was released in 1999 with the Netscape/Mozilla project Rhino, a JavaScript run-time system written in Java. It included a toy "JSDoc" HTML generator, versioned up to 1.3, as an ...
Key Code Qualifier is an error-code returned by a SCSI device. When a SCSI target device returns a check condition in response to a command , the initiator usually then issues a SCSI Request Sense command .
Internet Explorer 3.0: Netscape JavaScript: 1.0 2.0 Jan 1997 Windows IIS 3.0 Netscape JavaScript 1.1 3.0 Oct 1997 Internet Explorer 4.0: ECMA-262 1st edition [note 2] 1.3 4.0 Visual Studio 6.0 (as part of Visual InterDev) ECMA-262 1st edition 1.3 5.0 Mar 1999 Internet Explorer 5.0: ECMA-262 2nd edition 1.4 5.1 Internet Explorer 5.01 ECMA-262 ...
CommonJS's specification of how modules should work is widely used today for server-side JavaScript with Node.js. [1] It is also used for browser-side JavaScript, but that code must be packaged with a transpiler since browsers don't support CommonJS. [1]
It provides a 100% support of ECMAScript 5.1. [9] It was the first JavaScript implementation to achieve 100% pass rate on the ECMAScript 5.1 test suite. [10] With the release of Java 11, Nashorn was deprecated citing challenges to maintenance, and has been removed from JDK 15 onwards. [11] [12]