Learning WML, and WMLScript: Programming the Wireless Web

Learning WML, and WMLScript: Programming the Wireless Web

by Martin Frost (Author)

Synopsis

The next generation of mobile communicators is here, and delivering content to them will mean programming in WML (Wireless Markup Language) and WMLScript, the languages of the Wireless Application Environment (WAE). The WAE allows information in almost all applications to be formatted for display on mobile devices, such as cell phones, and enables the user to interact with the information. Why learn yet another technology? According to some estimates, 75 per cent of Web document viewing by the year 2002 will be through non-desktop devices, many using wireless technologies. Clearly, the future is wireless. For Web developers who want to get up to speed quickly in these languages, Learning WML & WMLScript maps out in detail the WAE and its two major components, WML and WMLScript. Fortunately, the WAE provides a World Wide Web-like model for writing applications, incorporating several key features of the Web to ease the transition for developers. Almost all wireless applications can be written with WML, which replaces HTML in the wireless environment, and WMLScript, which replaces JavaScript. With this book, Web developers with some knowledge of programming and C, Java, or JavaScript syntax can master both languages. Chapter by chapter, Learning WML & WMLScript takes readers through the following WML topics: decks, templates and cards; User Interaction; variables and contexts; tasks, events, and timers; text and text formatting; and images. WMLScript topics include: data types, conversions and variables; operators and expressions; statements; functions; and standard libraries.

$3.50

Save:$28.73 (89%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 197
Edition: 1
Publisher: O'Reilly Media
Published: 01 Oct 2000

ISBN 10: 1565929470
ISBN 13: 9781565929470

Author Bio
Martin Frost is the head of WAP technology at Digital Mobility Ltd in London, UK. He has been working with WAP since 1998, and has written a complete WAP browser and worked on the design of a WAP gateway. He has a degree in math and computing from Imperial College, London. He spends his free time reading, playing cricket, designing ever more elaborate schemes to wire up his home and his car, planning world domination, and trying to find time to actually do all these things.