Books : XQuery Kick Start

Books : XQuery Kick Start

XQuery Kick Start

by: James McGovern, Per Bothner, Kurt Cagle, James Linn, Vaidyanathan Nagarajan




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Average Rating:  out of 5 stars
Sales Rank: 1192030







Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 006.74
EAN: 9780672324796
ISBN: 0672324792
Label: Sams
Manufacturer: Sams
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 384
Publication Date: October 03, 2003
Publisher: Sams
Sales Rank: 1192030
Studio: Sams









Editorial Review:

Product Description:
XQuery Kick Start delivers a concise introduction to the XQuery standard, and useful implementation advice for developers needing to put it into practice. The book starts by explaining the role of XQuery in the XML family of specifications, and its relationship with XPath. The authors then explain the specification in detail, describing the semantics and data model, before moving to examples using XQuery to manipulate XML databases and document storage systems. Later chapters discuss Java implementations of XQuery and development tools that facilitate the development of Web sites with XQuery. This book is up to date with the latest XQuery specifications, and includes coverage of new features for extending the XQuery language.









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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Below average
Totally agree with previous post titled 'Poorly organized, random topics with little meat'.

The book has a amateurish feel, full of topics that are not coherent, basically just a few lines here and there to fill up the page.

Look for O'Reilly XQuery by Priscilla Walmsley, a much better book.






Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Poorly organized, random topics with little meat
I don't think I've read a computer book as poorly organized as this one. The basic premise seems to be present some random aspects of XQuery or related topics in a chapter and have no flow through the book.

There is a lot of good material in the book but try to find it - it's more or less impossible because the index is abysmal. There's no real introduction to how to use XQuery - instead we start off with XSLT. That may be OK (they are related) but it seemed a bit strange to me.

Another problem with the book is that some of it is out of date. The XQuery specification is a work in progress but the book was written after (and refers to) the final draft - but a lot of the examples are not compliant with that final draft.

The best thing that I can say about this book is that it forced me to research issues more deeply and therefore find out what I needed to know. I wouldn't buy this book - try to borrow it and see if it meets your needs.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - XQuery
These guys put together a wonderful book; I've find it an ideal guide to solving pitfalls using XQuery. Having this book on my desktop help me in preventing potential problems with my code and saving countless hours of time tracking down issues that aren't initially apparent.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - How to use XQuery
Many of the books on XQuery tell you how XQuery was created but not how to use it. This one is different and will help you hit the ground running. I recommend buying this book.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Essential XQuery
This book is about best practices, patterns and anti-patterns, and about how to use XML and XQuery correctly and efficiently. It will be useful to a professional with any level of experience. It may be used as a tutorial and read from the cover to cover, or one can enjoy reading selected items, depending on the experience and taste. The book's very detailed index makes it an excellent reference on the subject as well.

Start Kick XQuery




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