Beginning XML

Beginning XML

by David Hunter (Author), KurtCagle (Author), Chris Dix (Author), RogerKovack (Author), JonathanPinnock (Author), JeffRafter (Author)

Synopsis

What is this book about? Extensible Markup Language (XML) is a rapidly maturing technology with powerful real-world applications, particularly for the management, display, and organization of data. Together with its many related technologies it is an essential technology for anyone using markup languages on the web or internally. This book teaches you all you need to know about XML what it is, how it works, what technologies surround it, and how it can best be used in a variety of situations, from simple data transfer to using XML in your web pages. It builds on the strengths of the first edition, and provides new material to reflect the changes in the XML landscape notably SOAP and Web Services, and the publication of the XML Schemas Recommendation by the W3C. What does this book cover? Here are just a few of the things this book covers: * XML syntax and writing well-formed XML * Using XML Namespaces * Transforming XML into other formats with XSLT * XPath and XPointer for locating specific XML data * XML Validation using DTDs and XML Schemas * Manipulating XML documents with the DOM and SAX 2.0 * SOAP and Web Services * Displaying XML using CSS and XSL * Incorporating XML into tradition databases and n-tier architectures * XLink and XPointer for linking XML and non-XML resources Who is this book for? Beginning XML, 2nd Edition is for any developer who is interested in learning to use XML in web, e-commerce or data-storage applications. Some knowledge of mark up, scripting, and/or object oriented programming languages is advantageous, but not essential, as the basis of these techniques are explained as required.

$79.92

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 816
Edition: 2nd Edition
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Published: 20 Dec 2001

ISBN 10: 0764543946
ISBN 13: 9780764543944

Author Bio
Kurt Cagle is a writer and developer specializing in XML and Internet related issues. He has written eight books and more than one hundred articles on topics ranging from Visual Basic programming to the impact of the Internet on society, and has consulted for such companies as Microsoft, Nordstrom, AT&T and others. He also helped launch Fawcette's XML Magazine and has been the DevX DHTML and XML Pro for nearly two years. Chris Dix has been developing software for fun since he was 10 years old, and for a living for the past 8 years. He is one of the authors of Professional XML Web Services, and he frequently writes and speaks on the topic of XML and Web Services. Chris is Lead Developer for NavTraK, Inc., a leader in automatic vehicle location systems located in Salisbury, Maryland, where he develops Web Services and system architecture. He can be reached at cdix@navtrak.net. David Hunter is a Senior Architect for MobileQ, a leading mobile software solutions developer, and the first company to ship an XML-based mobility server. David has extensive experience building scalable applica tions, and provides training on XML. He also works closely with the team that develops MobileQ's flagship product, XMLEdge, which delivers the ideal mobile user experience on a diverse number of mobile devices. Roger Kovack has more than 25 years of software development experience, started by programming medical research applications in Fortran on DEC machines at the University of California. More recently he has consulted to Wells Fargo and Bank of America, developing departmental information systems on desktop and client/server platforms. Bitten by Java and the web bug in the mid '90s he developed web applications for Commerce One, a major B2B software vendor; and for LookSmart.com, one of the best known and still operating web portals. He was instrumental in bringing Java into those organizations to replace ASP and C++. Roger can be contacted on http://www xslroot.com. Jonathan Pinnock started programming in Pal III assembler on his school's PDP 8/e, with a massive 4K of memory, back in the days before Moore's Law reached the statute books. These days he spends most of his time developing and extending the increasingly successful PlatformOne product set that his company, JPA, markets to the financial services community. JPA's home page is at: www jpassoc.co.uk Jeff Rafter currently resides in Iowa City, where he is studying Creative Writing at the University of Iowa. For the past two years, he has worked with Standfacts Credit Services, a Los Angeles based company, developing XML interfaces for use in the mortgage industry. He also leads the XML development for Defined Systems, a web hosting company founded with his long time friend Dan English. In his free time, Jeff composes sonnets, plays chess in parks, skateboards, and reminisces about the Commodore64 video game industry of the late 1980s.