XML Specification Guide

XML Specification Guide

by IanS.Graham (Author), Liam Quin (Author)

Synopsis

XML (Extensible Markup Language) is one of the hottest technologies for Web development. It is based on SGML and while it has the advantage of being less complicated to use than SGML, it is both more complex and flexible than HTML. XML offers users the following advantages: it makes networked information easier to find; categorize; customize; and allows users to create documents that look and function exactly the same way through any browser; it allows Web pages to be updated without re-sending all data, thereby saving on bandwidth (for example, XML allows on-line booksellers to use tags such as price and number of pages for searching and categorising purposes); and support for XML is being built into products from Microsoft, Netcape, Adobe, DataChannel, and WebMethods. This text is the technical reference for Web and application programmers and developers. After a concise overview of the purpose and scope of XML and its principles, readers find a complete and in-depth annotated specification guide that includes sample applications. This comprehensive reference guide is designed for experienced Web developers and programmers and goes beyond comprehensive coverage of the XML specification to offer: namespaces, a recent W3C draft critical for large-scale, distributed applications; Tiny SML, a subset of XML used for special applications; databases and object-oriented models, including object inheritance and architectural forms.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 431
Edition: annotated edition
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Published: 28 Jan 1999

ISBN 10: 0471327530
ISBN 13: 9780471327530

Author Bio
IAN GRAHAM is Vice President in charge of Research and Development at Groveware, Inc. He is also Senior Instructional Technology Specialist with the University of Toronto Centre for Academic Technology, where he designs and prototypes applications for networks and the Internet. LIAM QUIN is a member of the W3C Standards Committee for XML.