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When I connect() to a URL. Is Java fetching the webpage as a browser would, just without displaying it?

I'm trying to understand for example, if I were to connect to a Youtube Video URL. Even though i could not see the page, is the URL Connection loading the page and playing the video as if from a typical browser (without the UI or visual representation of the page)?

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    It might help to learn how HTTP works in general. Jul 7, 2014 at 20:52
  • It is very unlikely that this is happening. There is more to playing a Youtube video than fetching some HTML. You need a flash component or something equivalent to actually handle the video stream. I would indeed recommend catching up on web requests in general...
    – Kris
    Jul 7, 2014 at 21:05
  • possible duplicate of Can you explain the HttpURLConnection connection process?
    – Kris
    Jul 7, 2014 at 21:06

2 Answers 2

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It is fetching the raw HTML of the web page. Similar if you where to open a page in your browser and right click->View Source.

If you connect to a Youtube page, you will get the raw HTML and within that code, will be a reference (href), most likely a tag that points to the source of the video.

--Edit

A browser then obviously interprets that HTML into what you see on your screen. A modern browser automatically connects to all references on that HTML page, as if loading multiple pages simultaneously, and putting them together.

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No, the URLConnection represents only that, a URL connection. Using UrlConnection.openConnection() is connecting to the page, but it still needs to be told what to do. It will provide you with a "printing" of the elements on the page only if told to do so. However, it has accessed that file. Connecting to and reading information from a page is a multistep process.

Please see the Oracle Java Documentation about URLConnections. It provides a lot more information and clarity into how this class works as well as how to use it.

http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/net/URLConnection.html

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