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The LaTeX Web Companion: Integrating TeX, HTML, and XML
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This book shows how you can publish LaTeX documents on the Web. LaTeX was born of the scientist's need to prepare well-formatted information, particularly with pictures and mathematics included; the Web was born of the scientist's need to communicate information electronically. Until now, it has been difficult to find solutions that address both needs. HTML and today's Web browsers deal inadequately with the nontextual components of scientific documents. This book, at last, describes tools and techniques for transforming LaTeX sources into Web formats for electronic publication, and for transforming Web sources into LaTeX documents for optimal printing. You will learn how to: *Make full use of Acrobat with LaTeX *Convert existing documents to HTML or XML *Use mathematics in Web applications *Use LaTeX to prepare Web pages *Read and write simple XML/SGML *Produce high-quality printed pages from Web-hosted XML or HTML pages You will find practical descriptions of: *LaTeX2HTML, which uses Perl to interpret LaTeX source and generate HTML *TeX4ht, which redefines LaTeX's macros to generate HTML or XML *Browser plugins, such as techexplorer, that are able to interpret mathematical markup directly *Tools for authoring and interpreting XML *Tools for translating XML into various output formats, using Cascading Style Sheets, DSSSL, or XSL *Mathematical Markup Language (MathML) In addition to giving the Internet location of the software described in this book, the authors also provide a full, annotated catalogue of URLs for the standards and documentation relating to this fast-moving area. Many of the packages and programs described in this book are freely available in public software archives, and the source code for examples has been placed on CTAN, the TeX archives. 0201433117B04062001
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New Perspectives on Creating Web Pages with HTML, XHTML, and XML, Comprehensive (New Perspectives (Paperback Course Technology))
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This second edition from the New Perspectives series provides comprehensive, step-by-step instruction on coding Web pages from scratch using HTML, XHTML, and XML. Offering new case problems, tutorials, and a new appendix on Web accessibility and Section 508 compliance, this text keeps students up to date on the latest in coding Web pages.
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Pro .NET 2.0 XML (Expert's Voice in .NET)
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XML is the de facto language for communication within and between distributed applications, whether they're on the Internet or a corporate network. XML is successful because of two strengths: it has a highly-structured human readable format and it can be transmitted as pure text. No matter how disparate applications and their architectures may be, text files can always be read, and therefore can accept XML data. This makes XML-based solutions advantageous over rival technologies like remoting. Pro .NET 2.0 XML is the first book to provide a complete solution to XML on the .NET Framework 2.0 including the new .NET 3.0 extensions that are being released in January 2007. It provides you with everything you need to know to take advantage of XML in every aspect of your job—including integration with Windows Communication Foundation. - This is the first book that describes how XML interacts with Windows Communication Foundation (part of the new .NET 3.0 extensions).
- Author Bipin Joshi is a Microsoft Certified Trainer who regularly teaches classes on XML. He provides the kind of clear, precise guidance that you need.
- This will be the most complete book on .NET 2.0 XML available. It covers everything you need to use XML effectively.
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Web Standards: Mastering HTML5, CSS3, and XML
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Web Standards: Mastering HTML5, CSS3, and XML provides solutions to the most common website problems, and gives you a deep understanding of web standards and how they can be applied to improve your website. You will learn how to create fully standards-compliant websites and provide search engine-optimized Web documents with faster download times, accurate rendering, correct appearance and layout, lower development cost, approved accessibility, backward and forward compatibility, and easy maintenance and content updating. The book covers all major Web standards, focusing on syntax, grammar, recommended annotations, and other standardization concerns.
Web Standards: Mastering HTML5, CSS3, and XML is also a comprehensive guide to current and future standards for the World Wide Web. As a web developer, you'll have seen problems with inconsistent appearance and behavior of the same site in different browsers. Web standards can and should be used to completely eliminate these problems. Web Standards: Mastering HTML5, CSS3, and XML describes how you can make the most of web standards, through technology discussions as well as practical sample code that you can use for your own sites and web applications. It also provides a quick guide to standard website creation for Web developers.
- Learn techniques and best practices to achieve full standards compliance
- Write valid markup, styles, and news feeds from scratch or standardize websites by redesign
- Restrict markup to semantics and provide reliable layout
What you’ll learn- The importance and benefits of Web standards
- How to write valid markup from scratch
- The most up-to-date standards, rather than non-finalized specifications
- How to provide meaningful semantics and machine-readable metadata
- How to restrict markup to semantics
- How to achieve full standard compliance reasonably
Who this book is forWeb Standards: Mastering HTML5, CSS3, and XML provides a complete reference of Web standardization resources for website developers. Table of Contents- Introduction to Web Standards
- Internationalization
- Markup Languages: More Than HTML5
- Serving and Configuration for a Modern Website
- Style Sheets and CSS3
- JavaScript and Web Applications
- Metadata and the Semantic Web
- Web Syndication
- Optimizing the Appearance of a CSS3 and HTML5 Website
- Accessibility
- Web Standards Development Tools
- Putting it All Together
- HTML5 and CSS3 Best Practices
- Markup Validation
- Most Common HTML5 and CSS3 Errors
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Beginning VB.NET XML: Essential XML Skills for VB.NET Programmers
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Extensible Markup Language (XML) has been perhaps the biggest buzzword in application development for several years and now Microsoft has taken XML into the core of its .NET Framework. This book is aimed at teaching XML (and related technologies such as XPath, XSLT, and XML Schema) to beginning and intermediate Visual Basic .NET developers who want to understand what all the fuss is about. Over the course of the book readers will develop a good appreciation of not only what XML is, and how to handle it in Visual Basic .NET, but also how to use XML to build applications to run on a single desktop, single web server or distributed, multi-platform web services, in ways that have been extremely difficult to achieve with previous technologies. To reinforce the core concepts, the book makes use of numerous individual examples along with two case studies. Firstly, there is an examination of how different XML based approaches can be used in the development of a contact application. The complexity of the project develops as the reader's knowledge increases through the book. Secondly, we dedicate a full chapter to describing the use of XML and a SQL Server database in the implementation of a web-based news portal.
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Questions & Answers
Question : How can I open a file with xml extention in a readable format?
I requested a document from my insurance company and it was sent to me by email, as a xml file. I tried to open it by IE browser, MS Word, Excel, note pad, but it opens as codes. I need to print this document, is there any way to open it in a readable format? thank you for your time.
Answer:
XML stands for eXtended Markup Language. It's like HTML, but it uses standard coding techniques for non-standard markup. It's awesome for programs to save files in, but unfortunately, unless you have the original program that saved it, you're just going to have to look at a bunch of code.You'll have to tell your insurance company to send it in another format, or find out which program they used to encode it. Maybe they can send a PDF?
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Question : How does an xml file relate to a flash gallery?
I have a flash banner template that I need to alter, but I only did it once and have forgotten the relation... I have everything except linking the info in the xml file to flash to create the gallery. I don't have the time to go through lengthy tutorials even tho that is my last resort at this point, but I'm sure someone can just connect the dots for me. Thanks a mil!So you're saying that I just open the fla file and publish? It reads automatically?
Answer:
An xml file will generally be loaded by the swf and the data from it will be used to load images. So the xml file itself most likely contains the URLs for the images to be loaded.
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Question : What is it easiest and fastest way to convert xml to comma delimited files?
Wanting to upload to bulk yahoo classifieds from an xml file and they only accept comma delimited.
Answer:
any text editor can replace by tab & by nothing...a simple program can do it for you, any programming language!
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Question : XML - how to automatically have your page open with the tags collapsed NOT expanded?
The title says it all. I need to know how to get an XML page to load having all of the expandable tags collapsed instead of already expanded when I open the page. Any help please?Thanks.
Answer:
I assume you mean opening up a raw XML file in IE or Firefox. There's no way to override their default behavior.(On a side note, Chrome and Safari will attempt to read any XML as XHTML, which usually results in just the CDATA showing up.)
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Question : How do I create a form on wordpress which sends the submitted information as an xml file to an ip address?
A client of mine wants a form to send the information to a database which she has had set up. It requires that the information from this form be sent via an xml file to an ip address.Something which i've never done before!Any help would be greatly appreciated.Thanks
Answer:
I'm not exactly sure how you would go about doing that. It sounds to me more like your client is trying to "Test" you. Unless that IP address has an active server on it (whether it be HTTP, FTP, SSH) that can accept inbound connections, you really can't do what you're looking to do. I'll run under the assumption that your client 1) Isn't an idiot and 2) Has an active web server on the "IP Address" that they're talking about.1) Build your form in Wordpress that contains proper input validation and what not so you know you're getting valid data2) Build your XML Array (although I would suggest JSON, if that's acceptable, since it's much easier to work with) 3) Use CURL to submit the content as POST data. Be sure to base64_encode() it first to avoid the need to deal with character changes.4) Put a script to take the POST on the HTTP server on the "IP address" and store the data into a file/folder of the clients choice.You're effectively building your own API to allow one computer to talk to another.
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Question : Where can I find a good XML sitemap generator?
I need an XML site-map to submit to Google, but can't find a good site map generator online. I would like one the preferably works in the browser and does not require any software to be downloaded.I tried a few that I found online, but they didnt seem to work properly. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Answer:
Just hand-code it - it's not hard to do http://www.sitemaps.org/protocol.php
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Question : How exactly does one company pass an xml document?
For example,Company X is requesting an doc in XML format from Company Y.Does Company Y just send the doc, or does it have to send a DTD or XML schema along with the doc?I understand XML and XML schemas, but I've never been in a situation where I've had to pass an XML doc to somebody else, so I'm curious about the process.
Answer:
There doesn't seem to be a hard and fast answer rule here. I've been through this a couple times, both as company X and Y., and I've seen (and used) a couple different solutions. DTD's are a bit dated, I think. I vaguely remember getting one a few years back. My preference is the schema.Remember that the DTD or schema only defines the syntax of the XML document, not the semantics. The schema might tell you that there's a field called ResidualQuota that's a double and occurs exactly once. But what does ResidualQuota mean? Well, it means nothing here, I just made it up. But if you're adding it to your XML, it probably has an obvious meaning to you. EVERYONE knows what a ResidualQuota means, right? Maybe everyone in company X, but maybe not at Company Y. And even if they do know what it means, they might not be sure if the value is dollars or cents or fahrenheit or centigrade. Or maybe it's in megaflops?So you usually need a document that defines the semantics of the XML. That document might just include the schema in an appendix.Either company X writes the document: This is what we're giving you. Or company Y writes it: This is what we demand you give us.
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Question : What is the easiest way to publish a web application based on xml/xsd?
I have an XML / XSD pair, which I usually edit with Altova XMLSpy.I am looking for a way to edit the XML through the web in a similar way to how XMLSpy works on Windows.The server-side would have to run on apache / linux.I am hopefully looking for something open source / free and that doesn't require a lot of effort to set up (that's why I don't want XSL)Does anyone know what's the easiest way to do this?Thanks in advance!
Answer:
I'm mostly just using a simple text editor.This way, you learn how the XML works. And how to make efficient code.
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Question : I have an xml sitemap build by the Google specificcation when I try to validate the XML i get warrning that I?
I have an xml sitemap build by the Google specificcation when I try to validate the XML i get warrning that I do not have DOCTYPE defined.I tried different
Answer:
somethings wrong. check that your ftp is set correctly, could be the filetype, byte order mark, etc. use the sitemap protocol sample to build your file and you should be fine then address FTP or windows/unix translationhttp://www.example.com/ 2005-01-01monthly0.8
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Question : What is the difference between XML and XML 2?
Someone has asked me to convert a text file (fixed width) into an XML 2 file. I know how to convert it to XML but what precisely is the difference between XML and XML 2?
Answer:
I didn't even know XML 2 was under development...and I work with XML in web development all the time.
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