ASP 3.0 does not differ greatly from ASP 2.0 but it does offer some additional enhancements such as Server.Transfer method, Server.Execute method, and an enhanced ASPError object. ASP 3.0 also enables buffering by default and optimized the engine for better performance.
ASP was supported until 14 January 2020 on Windows 7.[2] The use of ASP pages will be supported on Windows 8 for a minimum of 10 years from the Windows 8 release date.[2] ASP is supported in all available versions of IIS as of 2024.[3]
Architecture
ASP uses scripting on the server to generate content that is sent to the client's web browser via HTTP response. The ASP interpreter reads and executes all script code between <% and %> tags, the result of which is content generation. These scripts were written using VBScript, JScript, or PerlScript. The @Language directive, the <script language="language" runat="server" /> syntax or server configuration can be used to select the language. In the example below, Response.Write Now() is in an HTML page; it would be dynamically replaced by the current time of the server.
Server side
Client Side
Theserver'scurrenttime:
<%Response.WriteNow()%>
The server's current time:8/11/2015 6:24:45 PM
Web pages with the .aspfilename extension use ASP, although some web sites disguise their choice of scripting language for security purposes by using the more common .htm or .html extensions. Pages with the .aspx extension use compiled ASP.NET; however, ASP.NET pages may still include some ASP scripting. The introduction of ASP.NET led to use of the term Classic ASP for the original technology.
Sun Java System ASP (formerly ChiliSoft ASP) was a popular and reportedly complete emulator,[4] but it has been discontinued.
The Server object
The server object allows connections to databases (ADO), filesystem, and use of components installed on the server.