XMLs best-practices guide for creating expert, reusable, and highly flexible document structures. If you have a basic understanding of XML document creation and want to use XML's powerful technology to create quality structured documents and DTDs, then XML Elements of Style is the right place to learn more. It fills the void between introductory text and high-level, complex SGML references to give you the tools and techniques you'll need to intelligently apply XML to a variety of situations. The book is logically organized into five comprehensive sections-all of which focus on specific, related issues. The first section begins with and in-depth examination of the core structures of XML documents and thoroughly describes the techniques for creating rules about those structures. The second section focuses on the tools XML provides for creating documents and DTDs using both highly reusable smaller components and non-XML content. The third section examines the bigger picture of XML structures-from architectural issues to documentation consideration-giving you a clear understanding of the tools needed to create a elegant documents with maximum flexibility for interchange end integration. Section Four explores the sometimes misused or misunderstood features of XML and the last section concludes with an enlightening discussion of XML's ability to create documents that can be used in multiple scenarios as well as its ability to connect different systems and processes. Whether you're an XML or SGML developer, you'll refer to this first-of-its-kind, authoritative reference for years to come.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
|
| Simon St. Laurent | Simon St. Laurent is a web developer, network administrator, computer book author, and XML troublemaker living in Ithaca, NY. His books include XML: A Primer, XML Elements of Style, Building XML Applications, Cookies, and Sharing Bandwidth. He is a contributing editor to XMLhack.com and an occasional contributor to XML.com. |