Welcome to the first chapter of your Basic ASP Learning Series.
I mostly communicate on a personal level, so it’s better we acquaint ourselves in the beginning. My name is Amrit Hallan and I’m a web developer. I work through my web site – http://www.bytesworth.com. I’m not a nerd (and don’t want to be) and most of my knowledge has come to me piecemeal through lots of hard work and interaction with my other developer friends. I don’ t think it’d be fair to say that I’m an authority on ASP but yes, I have a few satisfied clients in my portfolio and I know enough to get you started. By the time you are through with these daily chapters, you’ll have learnt enough to make a small shopping cart in ASP.
Most of the chapters will be organized in a linear fashion, so that you always have to work according to your previously acquired knowledge. Sometimes I’ll sound like writing the entire chapter in a bulleted form, but that’ll be just to keep the unnecessary (I mean that is out of the scope of this reference) stuff out.
I wish I could know your name too. But I don’t know how many people are going to read this. If you want to let me know that YOU are the one at the moment reading this, you are welcome to send me a friendly message at mailto:amrit@b… I love to hear from people (ok, the word “people” excludes Spammers – they are not people).
Enough of my warming up. Here we go with the first chapter.
Installing Personal Web Server
==> Beginning of Chapter One http://localhost/bytesworth
as the URL.
After you’ve installed the PWS, it’s icon appears on your desktop, and at the bottom right of your screen. Click or double-click on the icon. On the main window, you should see the message:
Web publishing is on. Your Home page is available at http://servername
The servername is the name you use instead of localhost. But if you are confused about this name game, just use localhost and it should always work if you haven’t been naughty and messing around with your computer’s basic setup.
Before you proceed further, open the Windows Explorer, go to c:inetpubwwwroot and create a new folder here by the name of “learnASP” (how boringly predictable! So you can name it something else). We’ll be storing ALL our files in this folder.
Hence, whenever we want to run a newly created file, we’d type in the location bar:
http://localhost/learnASP/newfile.asp and press Enter.
Ok, next, click on the Advanced tab. Select Enable Default Document
In the Default Document(s) box, type the list of file names you would like to use as your default file once the name of your site is type in the browser.
If you have no idea what’s the default file, it is the file that answers your call when you type a specific URL without a specific file. For instance, if I type http://www.bytesworth.com the file that actually gets loaded by default is DEFAULT.ASP. This depends on the setting. Some servers use INDEX.ASP or INDEX.HTML or INDEX.SHTML. It all depends on the file parsing set up on your web-hosting server.
Then click on the Edit Properties button, after selecting the Home folder. There are three select boxes, viz., “Read”, “Execute”, “Script”. Select all of them. The selections tell the server that we want to execute server side scripts in our ASP pages. ASP pages won’t run if the server can’t read and execute them.
Close the window, and your PWS is running. Of course do not run two servers simultaneously. So if you installed the Apache Web Server and left it running, and then loaded PWS, there is going to be some problem for you to sort out.
Amrit Hallan is a freelance copywriter,
and a website content writer. He also dabbles
with PHP and HTML. For more tips and tricks in
PHP, JavaScripting, XML, CSS designing and
HTML, visit his blog at
http://www.aboutwebdesigning.com