These are the basics for the Cortex processor used in mobile phones. This being the Cortex A5 Processor. This has been used in phones such as the Nokia Lumia 510 which has an 800Mhz processor.There is also another popular processor being the Krait processor also made by ARM processors.
If you have any questions about the processors then you need to contact either the mobile phone manufacturer or the company who made them. These are only the basic specs for the Cortex A5. You can also find more mobile phone processors listed on our sister website.
Tomcat noob here. I’m trying to learn Tomcat 7, so I’m following tutorials ans starting with simple static helloword html and jsp apps. What I’m finding is that if create a file in my home directory and move it to /tomcat/webapps/ROOT/happ/ then I get a 404 error when I try to go to that page. However if I create the same script in /tomcat/webapps/ROOT/happ/ then it works as expected. If i create a script in my home directory and move it to /tomcat/webapps/ROOT/happ/ , that script gives my a 404 error, but if i copy the script in . /webapps/happ/ director like so: cp hello2.html hello3.html, then the hello3.html script will run fine, even though hello2.html produces a 404 error. The screen shot shows the output of ls -al. I thought file permissions might be the cause, but you’ll see that the highlighted files get the 404 error while the unhighlighted work fine, even though some of them have the same permissions. The steps if went through was in this.
- In the webapps/ROOT/happ/ directory gedit hello.html
- Move hello.html to
- cp hello.html hello2.html
- mv hello2.html /var/lib/tomcat/webapps/ROOT/happ/
- cp hello2.html hello3.html
- cp hello3.html
- cp hello3.html hello4.html
- mv hello4.html /var/lib/tomcat/webapps/ROOT/happ/
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- Related
- Hot Network Questions
- Specifying a Webpage Icon for Web Clip
- Specifying a Launch Screen Image
- Adding a Launch Icon Title
- Hiding Safari User Interface Components
- Changing the Status Bar Appearance
- Linking to Other Native Apps
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- Related
- Hot Network Questions
- Specifying a Webpage Icon for Web Clip
- Specifying a Launch Screen Image
- Adding a Launch Icon Title
- Hiding Safari User Interface Components
- Changing the Status Bar Appearance
- Linking to Other Native Apps
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Browse other questions tagged java linux jsp tomcat or ask your own question.
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A web application is designed to look and behave in a way similar to a native application—for example, it is scaled to fit the entire screen on iOS. You can tailor your web application for Safari on iOS even further, by making it appear like a native application when the user adds it to the Home screen. You do this by using settings for iOS that are ignored by other platforms.
For example, you can specify an icon for your web application used to represent it when added to the Home screen on iOS, as described in Specifying a Webpage Icon for Web Clip . You can also minimize the Safari on iOS user interface, as described in Changing the Status Bar Appearance and Hiding Safari User Interface Components , when your web application is launched from the Home screen. These are all optional settings that when added to your web content are ignored by other platforms.
Read Viewport Settings for Web Applications for how to set the viewport for web applications on iOS.
Specifying a Webpage Icon for Web Clip
You may want users to be able to add your web application or webpage link to the Home screen. These links, represented by an icon, are called Web Clips. Follow these simple steps to specify an icon to represent your web application or webpage on iOS.
To specify an icon for the entire website (every page on the website), place an icon file in PNG format in the root document folder called apple-touch-icon.png
To specify an icon for a single webpage or replace the website icon with a webpage-specific icon, add a link element to the webpage, as in:
In the above example, replace custom_icon.png with your icon filename.
To specify multiple icons for different device resolutions—for example, support both iPhone and iPad devices—add a sizes attribute to each link element as follows:
The icon that is the most appropriate size for the device is used. See the “Graphics” chapter of iOS Human Interface Guidelines for current icon sizes and recommendations.
If there is no icon that matches the recommended size for the device, the smallest icon larger than the recommended size is used. If there are no icons larger than the recommended size, the largest icon is used.
If no icons are specified using a link element, the website root directory is searched for icons with the apple-touch-icon. prefix. For example, if the appropriate icon size for the device is 58 x 58, the system searches for filenames in the following order:
Note: Safari on iOS 7 doesn’t add effects to icons. Older versions of Safari will not add effects for icon files named with the -precomposed.png suffix. See First Steps: Identifying Your App in iTunes Connect for details.
Specifying a Launch Screen Image
On iOS, similar to native applications, you can specify a launch screen image that is displayed while your web application launches. This is especially useful when your web application is offline. By default, a screenshot of the web application the last time it was launched is used. To set another startup image, add a link element to the webpage, as in:
In the above example, replace launch.png with your startup screen filename. See the “Graphics” chapter of iOS Human Interface Guidelines for current launch screen sizes and recommendations.
Adding a Launch Icon Title
On iOS, you can specify a web application title for the launch icon. By default, the tag is used. To set a different title, add a meta tag to the webpage, as in:
In the above example, replace AppTitle with your title.
Hiding Safari User Interface Components
On iOS, as part of optimizing your web application, have it use the standalone mode to look more like a native application. When you use this standalone mode, Safari is not used to display the web content—specifically, there is no browser URL text field at the top of the screen or button bar at the bottom of the screen. Only a status bar appears at the top of the screen. Read Changing the Status Bar Appearance for how to minimize the status bar.
Set the apple-mobile-web-app-capable meta tag to yes to turn on standalone mode. For example, the following HTML displays web content using standalone mode.
You can determine whether a webpage is displaying in standalone mode using the window.navigator.standalone read-only Boolean JavaScript property. For more on standalone mode, see apple-mobile-web-app-capable .
Changing the Status Bar Appearance
If your web application displays in standalone mode like that of a native application, you can minimize the status bar that is displayed at the top of the screen on iOS. Do so using the status-bar-style meta tag.
This meta tag has no effect unless you first specify standalone mode as described in Hiding Safari User Interface Components . Then use the status bar style meta tag, apple-mobile-web-app-status-bar-style , to change the appearance of the status bar depending on your application needs. For example, if you want to use the entire screen, set the status bar style to translucent black.
For example, the following HTML sets the background color of the status bar to black:
For more on status bar appearance, see the “UI Bars” chapter of iOS Human Interface Guidelines .
Linking to Other Native Apps
Your web application can link to other built-in iOS apps by creating a link with a special URL. Available functionality includes calling a phone number, sending an SMS or iMessage, and opening a YouTube video in its native app if it is installed. For example, to link to a phone number, structure an anchor element in the following format:
For a complete look of these capabilities, see Apple URL Scheme Reference.
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