Difference between revisions of "WebFund 2015W Lecture 23"

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===Front vs Back end===
===Front vs Back end===
* separate parts of app for...
** doing computation/storage/real work (back end)
** providing the interface (front end)
Can you do "real work" in the front end?
* Yes, but...
* Don't trust the answers
Front end is untrusted, back end is trusted
Modern web apps have many backends and can have multiple front ends (mobile, desktop)
* but "responsive design" says you should have one front end
So why put stuff in the front end?
* lower the load on the back end
* but main reason is latency (of network communication)


===Markup and Templates===
===Markup and Templates===

Revision as of 11:03, 1 April 2015

Notes

Two topics for last two lectures:

  • What are the fundamentals of web applications?
  • Web applications everywhere

Distributed Applications

Applications that run on multiple computers

  • separate memory, CPU, storage, communication (I/O)
  • can apply this processes, virtual hosts, or physical hosts

Localhost is useful when you want a distributed app on one computer

  • GET and POST can go essentially anywhere on the Internet
  • allows for flexible combination of code and data
  • web applications are the premier form of distributed applications today
  • with distributed applications, you don't control all the computers "your" code runs on

Structured Persistence

Front vs Back end

  • separate parts of app for...
    • doing computation/storage/real work (back end)
    • providing the interface (front end)

Can you do "real work" in the front end?

  • Yes, but...
  • Don't trust the answers

Front end is untrusted, back end is trusted

Modern web apps have many backends and can have multiple front ends (mobile, desktop)

  • but "responsive design" says you should have one front end

So why put stuff in the front end?

  • lower the load on the back end
  • but main reason is latency (of network communication)

Markup and Templates

Trust

Who do you trust?

  • library, runtime authors
  • content providers
  • ad providers
  • whatever else you add to a page

Trust means "who can screw you over"

  • if they go bad how badly are you hurt

Amazing the web works at all