Steps in a Typical Internet Client Application
The following table shows the steps you might perform in a typical Internet client application.
Your goal |
Actions you take |
Effects |
---|---|---|
Begin an Internet session. |
Create a CInternetSession object. |
Initializes WinInet and connects to server. |
Set an Internet query option (time-out limit or number of retries, for example). |
Returns FALSE if operation was unsuccessful. |
|
Establish a callback function to monitor the status of the session. |
Establishes a callback to CInternetSession::OnStatusCallback. Override OnStatusCallback to create your own callback routine. |
|
Connect to an Internet server, intranet server, or local file. |
Parses the URL and opens a connection to the specified server. Returns a CStdioFile (if you pass OpenURL a local file name). This is the object through which you access data retrieved from the server or file. |
|
Read from the file. |
Use CInternetFile::Read. |
Reads the specified number of bytes using a buffer you supply. |
Handle exceptions. |
Use the CInternetException class. |
Handles all common Internet exception types. |
End the Internet session. |
Dispose of the CInternetSession object. |
Automatically cleans up open file handles and connections. |
See Also
Concepts
Win32 Internet Extensions (WinInet)
Prerequisites for Internet Client Classes
Writing an Internet Client Application Using MFC WinInet Classes