This book is available in our private library for reference during training courses held at our Melksham, Wiltshire training centre.
All of our books (including "XML in a Nutshell") are also available to guests at Well House Manor during their stay.
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TITLE |
| XML in a Nutshell |
| EDITION |
| 1st |
| ISBN |
| 0-596-00058-8 |
| AUTHOR(S) |
| Elliotte Rusty Harold, W. Scott Means |
| PUBLISHER |
| O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. |
| PUBLISHED |
| 2001 |
| LEVEL(S) |
| 2 to 5 [about levels] |
| This edition has been replaced |
| Order current edition from amazon.com |
| SYNOPSIS |
XML in a Nutshell is the resource for developers in the rapidly evolving space of XML. Serious users of XML will find topics ranging from the most basic syntax rules, to the details of DTD creation, to the APIs you can use to read and write XML documents in various programming languages. Whether a web designer uses SML to add animations to web pages or a C++ programmer uses SOAP to serialize objects into a remote database, XML in a Nutshell covers the fundamental rules that all XML documents and authors must adhere to, including:
- Essentials of the basic XML standard. Gain an understanding of well-formed XML, DDTs, namespaces, and Unicode as quickly as possible.
- An exploration of key technologies used mainly for narrative XML documents such as web pages, books, and articles. Develop a working knowledge of XSLT, XPath, XLinks, XPointers, CSS, and XSL-FO.
-The use of XML for data-intensive documents. One of the most unexpected developments in XML was its enthusiastic adoption for structured documents such as spreadsheets, financial statistics, mathematical tables, and software file formats. Understand the tools and APIs needed to write software that processes XML, including SAX, the Simple API for XML, and DOM, the W3C Document Object Model.
This book also contains a set of quick reference chapters that form the core of any O'Reilly Nutshell reference. These chapters give you detailed syntax rules and usage examples for the core XML technologies, including XML, DDTs, XPath, XSLT, SAX, and DOM. This is the section to turn to when you need to quickly find the precise syntax for something you know you can do but don't remember exactly how to do. XML in a Nutshell is an essential part of helping developers format files and data structures correctly for use in XML documents. You'll want to keep this book close at hand as you delve into XML.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
| | Elliotte Rusty Harold | Elliotte Rusty Harold is originally from New Orleans, to which returns periodically in search of a decent bowl of gumbo. However, he currently resides in the Prospect Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn with his wife Beth and cats Charm (named after the quark) and Marjorie (named after his mother-in-law). He's an adjunct professor of computer science at Polytechnic University, where he teaches Java and object-oriented programming. His Cafe au Lait web site at http://www.ibiblio.org/xml, has become one of the most popular independent Java sites on the Internet, and his spinoff sight, Cafe con Leche at http://www. ibiblio.org/xml, has become one of the Internet's most popular XML sites. Elliotte's previous books for O'Reilly include Java I/O and Java Network Programming. | | W. Scott Means | W. Scott Means has been a professional software developer since 1988, when he joined Microsoft Corporation at the age of 17. He was one of the original developers of OS/2 1.1 and Windows NT, and did some of the early work on Microsoft Network for the Advanced Technology and Business Development group. Most recently he served as CEO of Enterprise Web Machines, a South Carolina-based Internet infrastructure venture. He is currently writing full-time and consulting on XML and Internet topics. |
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| Total of 1 books listed out of a total of 609 books |
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