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Titre : | Java & XML : Solutions to Real-World Problems |
Auteurs : | Brett McLaughlin |
Type de document : | document électronique |
Editeur : | [S.l.] : O'Reilly Media, 2001 |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-0-596-00197-1 |
Index. décimale : | 005.72 |
Résumé : |
While the XML "buzz" still dominates talk among Internet developers, the critical need is for information that cuts through the hype and lets Java programmers put XML to work. *Java & XML* shows how to use the APIs, tools, and tricks of XML to build real-world applications, with the end result that both the data and the code are portable. This second edition of *Java & XML *adds chapters on Advanced SAX and Advanced DOM, new chapters on SOAP and data binding, and new examples throughout. A concise chapter on XML basics introduces concepts, and the rest of the book focuses on using XML from your Java applications. Java developers who need to work with XML, or think that they will in the future--as well as developers involved in the new peer-to-peer movement, messaging, or web services--will find the new *Java & XML* a constant companion. This book covers: * The basics of XML, including DTDs, namespaces, XML Schema, XPath, and XSL * The SAX API, including all handlers, the SAX 2 extensions, filters, and writers * The DOM API, including DOM Level 2, Level 3, and the Traversal, Range, CSS, Events, and HTML modules. * The JDOM API, including the core, a look at XPath support, and JDOM as a JSR * Using web publishing frameworks like Apache Cocoon * Developing applications with XML-RPC * Using SOAP and UDDI for web services * Data Binding, using both DTDs and XML Schema for constraints * Building business-to-business applications with XML * Building information channels with RSS and dynamic content with XSP Includes a quick reference on SAX 2.0, DOM Level 2, and JDOM. ### Review 'Was I impressed with this book? Indeed I was! The content is both timely and accurate, the reading is easy and enjoyable - a very rare achievement.' Java Desk, Israel (Java User Group) ### About the Author Brett McLaughlin has been working in computers since the Logo days. (Remember the little triangle?) He currently specializes in building application infrastructure using Java and Java-related technologies. He has spent the last several years implementing these infrastructures at Nextel Communications and Allegiance Telecom, Inc. Brett is one of the co-founders of the Java Apache project Turbine, which builds a reusable component architecture for web application development using Java servlets. He is also a contributor of the EJBoss project, an open source EJB application server, and Cocoon, an open source XML web-publishing engine. He is author of the soon-to-be-released O'Reilly book, Building Java Enterprise Applications. |