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 | | | |  | | | Product Details
Format: Paperback, 2nd ed., 550 pages
Edition: 2ND
Publisher: O'Reilly & Associates, Incorporated
ISBN: 0596001975
Release Date: Jan 8, 2002
| |  | | | In Brief Java revolutionized the programming world by providing a platform-independent programming language. XML takes the revolution a step further with a platform-independent language for interchanging data. Java and XML shows how to put the two together, building real-world applications in which both the code and the data are truly portable.
| | | | From The Publisher XML has been the biggest buzzword on the Internet community for the past year. But how do you cut through all the hype and actually put it to work? Java revolutionized the programming world by providing a platform-independent programming language. XML takes the revolution a step further by providing a platform-independent language for interchanging data. Java and XML share many features that are ideal for building Web-based enterprise applications, such as platform-independence, extensibility, reusability, global language (Unicode) support, and both are based on industry standards. Together Java and XML allow enterprises to simplify and lower cost of information sharing and data exchange. Java and XML shows you how to put the two together, building real-world applications in which both the code and the data are truly portable.
This book covers: - The basics of XML
- Using standard Java APIs to parse XML
- Designing new document types using DTDs and Schemas
- Writing programs that generate XML data
- Transforming XML into different forms using XSL transformations (XSL/T)
- XML-RPC
- Using a web publishing framework like Apache-Cocoon
- XML as a configuration language
This is the first book to cover the most recent versions of the DOM specification (DOM 2), the SAX API (SAX 2) and Sun's Java API for XML.
| | | | Foreword XML, XML, XML, XML. You can see it on hats and t-shirts, read about it on the cover of every technical magazine on the planet, and hear it on the radio or the occasional Gregorian chant album .... well, maybe it hasn't gone quite that far yet, but don't be surprised if it does. XML, the Extensible Markup Language, has seemed to take over every aspect of technical life, particularly in the Java community. An application is no longer considered an enterprise-level product if XML isn't being used somewhere. Legacy systems are being accessed at a rate never before seen, and companies are saving millions and even billions of dollars on system integration, all because of three little letters. Java developers wake up with fever sweats wondering how they are going to absorb yet another technology, and the task seems even more daunting when embarked upon; the road to XML mastery is lined with acronyms: XML, XSL, XPath, RDF, XML Schema, DTD, PI, XSLT, XSP, JAXP, SAX, DOM, and more. And there isn't a development manager in the world that doesn't want their team learning about XML today! When XML became a formal specification at the World Wide Web Consortium in early 1998, relatively few were running in the streets claiming that the biggest thing since Java itself (arguably bigger!) had just made its way onto the technology stage. Barely two years later, XML and a barrage of related technologies for manipulating and constraining XML have become the mainstay of data representation for Java systems. XML promises to bring to a data format what Java brought to a programming language: complete portability. In fact, it is only with XML that the promise of Java is realized;Java's portabili... [continues...]
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| | | | | | Keywords Computer Books: General, Computer Programming Languages, Computer Networks, Computer Bks - Languages / Programming, Computers, Programming Languages - Java, Programming Languages - XML, Internet - Web Site Design, Programming Languages - HTML
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