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Beginners
ASP 3.0
Programming with Objects
To begin our look at programming with objects, let's use our
trusty telephone object again. Being a technophile and always
needing to have the latest and greatest, you have even hooked
up your telephone to your computer. Now you want to be able
to do something with it. If we want the computer to interact
with the telephone, we need a programmatic object that will
allow us to control the physical telephone.
It is this representation of a physical object that gives programmatic
objects their power. Representation is literally the process
of taking our real world object and turning it into a software
object. In our telephone object example the color of the phone
is represented by a color property, the weight of the phone
is represented by a weight property. The ability to pick up
the receiver and dial a friend is modeled by the PlaceCall method.
The real world telephone has a set of features or characteristics
that can be broken down into properties, methods and events.
Once we have identified these features it makes it easier, to
represent them in our software object.
However as described, in the previous section, the concept
of encapsulation means that the actual workings of the telephone
object are hidden from us. When a phone rings, you don't need
to know how the signal was transmitted to the exchange, you
only need to interact with the interface (talk into the handset).
This is what we're going to consider with our software object,
the interfaces we use to communicate with it, rather than the
software object itself. So when we use our computer to control
our object, it's not going to use the inner workings of the
objects, rather it's going to communicate with the object and
control it using its interfaces (the methods and events).
This book will not cover how to create the software object
itself (you will be able to download this from the Wrox website
– details of this are in the Try It Out coming up): rather,
we will take a look at the programmatic object, and then look
at how we can use the object's properties, methods, and events.
The Software Telephone Object
So now we are shifting gears here from describing the real-world
telephone as an object to describing a software telephone object.
This is an example of representation. The properties of the
telephone object are:
Property Name
Color
Material
Weight
NumberOfKeys
TelephoneNumber
Connected
As you can see, we have used the same names that we used when
discussing the physical telephone object. The methods of the
telephone object are the same as well. In this case, the methods
that have parameters will have the same parameters as well.
Method Name
Parameters
PlaceCall
NumOutgoing
Answer
No Parameters
HangUp
No Parameters
SendCardNumber
NumCCN, NumPIN
Disconnect
No Parameters
Finally – as you will expect by now – events that the object
will support are the same events that are supported by the physical
telephone object.
Event Name
Parameters
IncomingCall
NumIncoming
LineBusy
No Parameters
CallWaiting
NumIncoming
Now that we have defined the interfaces of our telephone object,
we can take a look at some code examples that will show you
how to use these interfaces. For these examples, we will be
using VBScript, which is the language that is being used throughout
the book. Since there are three types of interfaces, we will
look at three code samples – one for each type.
Setting Up the Telephone Object Example
We've supplied the telephone object on the Wrox web site. It
comes as a DLL file, which has to be installed and registered
before you can use it. The good news is that it is automatically
installed and registered by running a self-contained exe file.
Once you've run the file, you will have a telephone object,
ready to include in the script of your ASP pages. Let's look
at what needs to be done to install it.
Try It Out – Installing the Telephone DLL
1 Download the MyTelephone.exe file from the Wrox web site at
http://www.wrox.com. You can also find full support with any
problems encountered during the installation at this URL.
2 Once the file has been downloaded, you can run it to expand
all of the files into a temporary directory.
3 Go to that temporary directory and run setup.exe to install
the MyTelephone object. Click on OK on the first dialog to confirm
installation, and then click the icon to proceed with installation.
Troubleshooting Problems
The differences between each individual's computer, operating
system and set up sometimes means that the software installs
but may fail to register correctly. If you run any of the examples
later in this chapter and encounter an error generated by a
call to any of the methods, such as the PlaceCall method, then
this will be the problem.
The problem is easy enough to rectify, all you need to do is
manually register the DLL yourself. To do that, once you've
run setup.exe you'll find that a file called MyTelephone.dll
has been created. It's also a good idea to stop and restart
the web application manager before you use the DLL in any examples.
It can be placed in any directory - the only important thing
is that the file be registered in that directory. To do that,
there is a file (provided by the machine's operating system)
called REGSVR32.EXE. If you run that file and pass the name
of the .dll as a parameter (e.g. regsvr32 MyTelephone.dll),
it will register the file in that location. The best way to
do this is from the command prompt: copy the .dll file to the
desired directory, go to that directory, and then run regsvr32
MyTelephone.dll. The OS should find regsvr32.exe since it is
usually in the WinNT/System32 folder, which is in the default
path.
If it's still not working then check that the machine you are
actually installing the file on is actually the web server,
and not just the machine with your browser on, and then look
at the web site http://p2p.wrox.com for support if you still
have problems.
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