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Bestsellers > Books > XML

Advanced XML Applications from the Experts at The XML Guild

»rank: 1023939

by: The XML Guild


: :Numerous books abound for the beginning programmer who wants to learn XML, but there are few learning resources available for those who are already proficient in XML and need expert-level advice to help maximize their workflow. Advanced XML Applications from the Experts at The XML Guild provides such a resource, written by the expert programmers at The XML Guild. The book is not intended to be another exhaustive XML 'bible,' rather, it’s a collection of advanced tips and techniques that the authors have used in the real world-and are now happy to share with you. Each chapter is written by the guild member considered to be the expert on a particular topic.


Professional XML Schemas

»rank: 970223

by: Jon Duckett, Nik Ozu, Kevin Williams, Stephen Mohr, Kurt Cagle, Oliver Griffin, Francis Norton, Ian Stokes-Rees, Jeni Tennison


: :In order to leverage XML's power as a self-describing and extensible language, we need a way to define and describe the allowable content of any type of XML document. In the past, this has been achieved with DTDs, but these have in many ways fallen short of the requirements for working with data. XML Schemas were created to provide a more powerful and flexible mechanism for describing permissible document structures using XML syntax. They provide a set of built-in datatypes, which can mimic the object-oriented mechanisms of many languages, offer support for namespaces, and facilities for automated documentation. Professional XML Schemas exhaustively details the W3C XML Schema language, and teaches the new ...


Data on the Web: From Relations to Semistructured Data and XML (The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Data Management Systems)

»rank: 897321

by: Serge Abiteboul, Dan Suciu, Peter Buneman


: :The Web is causing a revolution in how we represent, retrieve, and process information Its growth has given us a universally accessible database-but in the form of a largely unorganized collection of documents. This is changing, thanks to the simultaneous emergence of new ways of representing data: from within the Web community, XML; and from within the database community, semistructured data. The convergence of these two approaches has rendered them nearly identical. Now, there is a concerted effort to develop effective techniques for retrieving and processing both kinds of data.Data on the Web is the only comprehensive, up-to-date examination of these rapidly evolving retrieval and processing strategies, which are of critical importance ...


SOAP: Cross Platform Web Services Development Using XML

»rank: 937841

by: Scott Seely, Kent Sharkey


: :SOAP will be the universal 'application glue' for tomorrow's widely distributed systems. It's simple, based on widely deployed standards such as XML and HTTP, and will enable virtually any business software to communicate across the Internet. SOAP: Cross Platform Internet Development Using XML offers a practical, hands-on introduction to SOAP that demonstrates how to leverage this technology on multiple platforms, using virtually every leading programming language. Seely begins by reviewing the history of distributed computing, and demonstrating how SOAP solves distributed computing problems that DCOM and CORBA failed to solve. He presents basic introductions to XML, and then to SOAP's syntax -- including SOAP's use of HTTP headers, the SOAP payload, error ...


Building XML Web Services for the Microsoft .NET Platform

»rank: 320602

by: Scott Short


: : Discover how to revolutionize the online exchange of business information with this in-depth developer's guide to Web Services-the building blocks of the .NET platform. This book takes enterprise developers inside the architecture, protocols, and programming practices for building distributed-object Web Services. The authors also step readers through building a high-end Web Service of their own, using real-world examples and proven strategies. All the book's code examples appear on the companion CD-ROM.


Foundations Book II: Understanding SQL Server 2005 Supporting Technology (XML, XSLT, XQuery, XPath, MS Schemas, DTD's, Namespaces).

»rank: 1280162

by: Rigoberto Garcia PhD


: : Discover how to revolutionize the online exchange of business information with this in-depth developer's guide to Web Services-the building blocks of the .NET platform. This book takes enterprise developers inside the architecture, protocols, and programming practices for building distributed-object Web Services. The authors also step readers through building a high-end Web Service of their own, using real-world examples and proven strategies. All the book's code examples appear on the companion CD-ROM.


Professional JSP : Using JavaServer Pages, Servlets, EJB, JNDI, JDBC, XML, XSLT, and WML

»rank: 952356

by: Karl Avedal, Danny Ayers, Timothy Briggs, George Gonchar, Naufal Khan, Peter Henderson, Mac Holden, Andre Lei, Dan Malks, Sameer Tyagi, Stephan Osmont, Paul Siegmann, Gert Van Damme, Steve Wilkinson, Stefan Zeiger, Ari Halberstadt, Carl Burnham, John Timney, Tom Myers, Alexander Nakhimovsky


: :Professional JavaServer Pages covers a wide variety of areas including design and architecture, JSPs and their relation to J2EE (Servlets, EJBs, JDBC etc) as well as extensive coverage of the tag extension mechanism that allows you to customize the tags you use in your pages to the data you're presenting. Readers are given an introduction to JSP, explaining how they relate to servlets, showing the tags, and creating beans to encapsulate business logic, to keep web page design simple. Further chapters cover database access with JDBC and connection pooling, JSP debugging, and web application architecture using JSP and servlets. After considering security issues in JSP web applications, the book concludes with seven ...


XML and HTTP Data Access Classes

»rank: 1275087

by: Darshan Singh


: :HTTP is the primary backbone of the Web. XML is rapidly becoming the de facto data format. These two technologies can be used together to build web-enabled data exchange applications. In this article, Darshan Singh explores the HTTP data access classes in MSXML (Microsoft XML Core Services) and in the .NET Framework. We'll begin by discussing the MSXML classes XMLHTTP and ServerXMLHTTP; and then we'll review the .NET Framework classes HttpWebRequest and HttpWebResponse in the System.Net namespace. The XMLHTTP class is designed to be used on the client side to send the requests to HTTP servers, whereas ServerXMLHTTP is best suited for server-to-server HTTP data communication. There are many differences between these ...


Essential XML: Beyond MarkUp (DevelopMentor Series)

»rank: 372056

by: Don Box, Aaron Skonnard, John Lam


: :XML holds out the promise of a universal and standard means of object/component communication that vastly reduces the need for reliance on competing ORB standards such as Enterprise JavaBeans, COM, and CORBA. In this book, Don Box covers every key issue, technology, and technique involved in using XML as the 'ultimate translator' between disparate software components and environments. Essential XML starts by contrasting the XML approach to software interoperability with pre-XML practices, technologies, and methodologies, including COM, CORBA, and EJB. Next, it examines XML-based approaches to metadata, declarative and procedural programming through transformation, and programmatic interfaces -- showing how XML's platform, language and vendor independence -- and its accessibility -- make it ...


Professional Java E-Commerce

»rank: 1111429

by: Subrahmanyam Allamaraju, Ronald Ashri, Chad Darby, Robert Flenner, Alex Linde, Tracie Karsjens, Mark Kerzner, Alex Krotov, Jim MacIntosh, James McGovern, Thor Mirchandani, Bryan Plaster, Don Reamey, P.G. Sarang


: :The term e-commerce encompasses a spectrum of trading interactions from the business-to-consumer (B2C) transactions that facilitate Web-based retail trade, to business-to-business (B2B) data exchange that increases supply chain efficiency. This book shows how the Java platform and Java technologies can be, and have been, employed to develop solutions that address these scenarios. To allow readers to gain a full appreciation of the diversity of topics involved in building e-commerce solutions, the book consists of five main sections. We begin by looking at the general area of e-business and the commercial considerations surrounding such application development. We then look at the Java 2 Platform Enterprise Edition (J2EE), XML, and XSLT. Building on this, ...



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