JavaScript allows a Web page
to perform "if-then" kinds of decisions based on browser version,
operating system, user input, and, in more recent browsers, details about the
screen size in which the browser is running. While a server CGI program can
make some of those same kinds of decisions, not everyone has access to or the
expertise to create CGI programs. For example, an experienced CGI programmer
can examine information about the browser whenever a request for a page is
made; thus a server so equipped might serve up one page for Navigator users and
a different page for Internet Explorer users. Beyond browser and operating
system version, a CGI program can't know more about the environment. But a
JavaScript-enhanced page can instruct the browser to render only certain
content based on the browser, operating system, and even the screen size.
Scripting can even go further
if the page author desires. For example, the author may include a preference
screen that lets the user determine the desired background and text color
combination. A script can save this information on the client in a
well-regulated local file called a cookie. The next time the user comes to the
site, scripts in its pages look to the cookie info and render the page in the
color combination selected previously. The server is none the wiser, nor does
it have to store any visitor-specific information.
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