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Beginning XML, 4th Edition (Programmer to Programmer) - XML
 
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Beginning XML, 4th Edition (Programmer to Programmer) Beginning XML, 4th Edition (Programmer to Programmer)
Price : $39.99 $14.00

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When the first edition of this book was written, XML was a relatively new language but already gaining ground fast and becoming more and more widely used in a vast range of applications. By the time of the second edition, XML had already proven itself to be more than a passing fad, and was in fact being used throughout the industry for an incredibly wide range of uses. With the third edition, it was clear that XML was a mature technology, but more important, it became evident that the XML landscape was dividing into several areas of expertise. Now in this edition, we needed to categorize the increasing number of specifications surrounding XML, which either use XML or provide functionality in addition to the XML core specification.

So what is XML? It's a markup language, used to describe the structure of data in meaningful ways. Anywhere that data is input/output, stored, or transmitted from one place to another, is a potential fit for XML's capabilities. Perhaps the most well-known applications are web-related (especially with the latest developments in handheld web access—for which some of the technology is XML-based). However, there are many other non-web-based applications for which XML is useful—for example, as a replacement for (or to complement) traditional databases, or for the transfer of financial information between businesses. News organizations, along with individuals, have also been using XML to distribute syndicated news stories and blog entries.

This book aims to teach you all you need to know about XML—what it is, how it works, what technologies surround it, and how it can best be used in a variety of situations, from simple data transfer to using XML in your web pages. It answers the fundamental questions:

* What is XML?

* How do you use XML?

* How does it work?

* What can you use it for, anyway?

This book is for people who know that it would be a pretty good idea to learn XML but aren't 100 percent sure why. You've heard the hype but haven't seen enough substance to figure out what XML is and what it can do. You may be using development tools that try to hide the XML behind user interfaces and scripts, but you want to know what is really happening behind the scenes. You may already be somehow involved in web development and probably even know the basics of HTML, although neither of these qualifications is absolutely necessary for this book.

What you don't need is knowledge of markup languages in general. This book assumes that you're new to the concept of markup languages, and we have structured it in a way that should make sense to the beginner and yet quickly bring you to XML expert status.

The word "Beginning" in the title refers to the style of the book, rather than the reader's experience level. There are two types of beginner for whom this book is ideal:

* Programmers who are already familiar with some web programming or data exchange techniques. Programmers in this category will already understand some of the concepts discussed here, but you will learn how you can incorporate XML technologies to enhance those solutions you currently develop.

* Those working in a programming environment but with no substantial knowledge or experience of web development or data exchange applications. In addition to learning how XML technologies can be applied to such applications, you will be introduced to some new concepts to help you understand how such systems work.

The subjects covered in this book are arranged to take you from novice to expert in as logical a manner as we could. This Fourth Edition is structured in sections based on various areas of XML expertise. Unless you are already using XML, you should start by reading the introduction to XML in Part I. From there, you can quickly jump into specific areas of expertise, or, if you prefer, you can read through the book in order. Keep in mind that there is quite a lot of overlap in XML, and that some of the sections make use of techniques described elsewhere in the book.

* The book begins by explaining what exactly XML is and why the industry felt that a language like this was needed.

* After covering the why, the next logical step is the how, so it shows you how to create well-formed XML.

* Once you understand the whys and hows of XML, you'll go on to some more advanced things you can do when creating your XML documents, to make them not only well formed, but valid. (And you'll learn what "valid" really means.)

* After you're comfortable with XML and have seen it in action, the book unleashes the programmer within and looks at an XML-based programming language that you can use to transform XML documents from one format to another.

* Eventually, you will need to store and retrieve XML information from databases. At this point, you will learn not only the state of the art for XML and databases, but also how to query XML information using an SQL-like syntax called XQuery.

* XML wouldn't really be useful unless you could write programs to read the data in XML documents and create new XML documents, so we'll get back to programming and look at a couple of ways that you can do that.

* Understanding how to program and use XML within your own business is one thing, but sending that information to a business partner or publishing it to the Internet is another. You'll learn about technologies that use XML that enable you to send messages across the Internet, publish information, and discover services that provide information.

* Since you have all of this data in XML format, it would be great if you could easily display it to people, and it turns out you can. You'll see an XML version of HTML called XHTML. You'll also look at a technology you may already be using in conjunction with HTML documents called CSS. CSS enables you to add visual styles to your XML documents. In addition, you'll learn how to design stunning graphics and make interactive forms using XML.

* Finally, the book ends with a case study, which should help to give you ideas about how XML can be used in real-life situations, and which could be used in your own applications.

This book builds on the strengths of the earlier editions, and provides new material to reflect the changes in the XML landscape—notably XQuery, RSS and Atom, and AJAX. Updates have been made to reflect the most recent versions of specifications and best practices throughout the book. In addition to the many changes, each chapter has a set of exercise questions to test your understanding of the material. Possible solutions to these questions appear in Appendix A.

Part I: Introduction: The introduction is where most readers should begin. The first three chapters introduce some of the goals of XML as well as the specific rules for constructing XML. Once you have read this part you should be able to read and create your own XML documents.

Chapter 1: What Is XML?: This chapter cover some basic concepts, introducing the fact that XML is a markup language (a bit like HTML) whereby you can define your own elements, tags, and attributes (known as a vocabulary). You'll see that tags have no presentation meaning—they're just a way to describe the structure of the data.

Chapter 2: Well-Formed XML: In addition to explaining what well-formed XML is, we offer a look at the rules that exist (the XML 1.0 and 1.1 Recommendations) for naming and structuring elements—you need to comply with these rules in order to produce well-formed XML.

Chapter 3: XML Namespaces: Because tags can be made up, you need to avoid name conflicts when sharing documents. Namespaces provide a way to uniquely identify a group of tags, using a URI. This chapter explains how to use namespaces.

Part II: Validation: In addition to the well-formedness rules you learn in Part I, you will most likely want to learn how to create and use different XML vocabularies. This Part introduces you to DTDs, XML Schemas, and RELAX NG: three languages that define custom XML vocabularies. It also shows you how to utilize these definitions to validate your XML documents.

Chapter 4: Document Type Definitions: You can specify how an XML document should be structured, and even provide default values, using Document Type Definitions (DTDs). If XML conforms to the associated DTD, it is known as valid XML. This chapter covers the basics of using DTDs.

Chapter 5: XML Schemas: XML Schemas, like DTDs, enable you to define how a document should be structured. In addition to defining document structure, they enable you to specify the individual datatypes of attribute values and element content. They are a more powerful alternative to DTDs.

Chapter 6: RELAX NG: RELAX NG is a third technology used to define the structure of documents. In addition to a new syntax and new features, it takes the best from XML Schemas and DTDs, and is therefore very simple and very powerful. RELAX NG has two syntaxes; both the full syntax and compact syntax are discussed.

Part III: Processing: In addition to defining and creating XML documents, you need to know how to work with documents to extract information and convert it to other formats. In fact, easily extracting information and converting it to other formats is what makes XML so powerful.

Chapter 7: XPath: The XPath language is used to locate sections and data in the XML document, and it’s important in many other XML technologies.

Chapter 8: XSLT: XML can be transformed into other XML documents, HTML, and other formats using XSLT stylesheets, which are introduced in this chapter.

Part IV: Databases: Creating and processing XML documents is good, but eventually you will want to store those documents. This section describes strategies for storing and retrieving XML documents and document fragments from different databases.

Chapter 9: XQuery, the XML Query Language: Very often, you will need to retrieve information from within a database. XQuery, which is built on XPath and XPath2, enables you to do this in an elegant way.

Chapter 10: XML and Databases: XM...

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XML in a Nutshell, Third Edition XML in a Nutshell, Third Edition
Price : $44.99 $12.99

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If you're a developer working with XML, you know there's a lot to know about XML, and the XML space is evolving almost moment by moment. But you don't need to commit every XML syntax, API, or XSLT transformation to memory; you only need to know where to find it. And if it's a detail that has to do with XML or its companion standards, you'll find it--clear, concise, useful, and well-organized--in the updated third edition of XML in a Nutshell.

With XML in a Nutshell beside your keyboard, you'll be able to:

  • Quick-reference syntax rules and usage examples for the core XML technologies, including XML, DTDs, Xpath, XSLT, SAX, and DOM
  • Develop an understanding of well-formed XML, DTDs, namespaces, Unicode, and W3C XML Schema
  • Gain a working knowledge of key technologies used for narrative XML documents such as web pages, books, and articles technologies like XSLT, Xpath, Xlink, Xpointer, CSS, and XSL-FO
  • Build data-intensive XML applications
  • Understand the tools and APIs necessary to build data-intensive XML applications and process XML documents, including the event-based Simple API for XML (SAX2) and the tree-oriented Document Object Model (DOM)
This powerful new edition is the comprehensive XML reference. Serious users of XML will find coverage on just about everything they need, from fundamental syntax rules, to details of DTD and XML Schema creation, to XSLT transformations, to APIs used for processing XML documents. XML in a Nutshell also covers XML 1.1, as well as updates to SAX2 and DOM Level 3 coverage. If you need explanation of how a technology works, or just need to quickly find the precise syntax for a particular piece, XML in a Nutshell puts the information at your fingertips.

Simply put, XML in a Nutshell is the critical, must-have reference for any XML developer.

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Definitive XML Schema Definitive XML Schema
Price : $57.99 $24.50

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Editorial Review :

The authoritative XML Schema reference and tutorial!

  • Leverage the full power of XML Schema!
  • In-depth coverage of the approved W3C Recommendation
  • Schema design–practical and thorough
  • Transition help for experienced DTD developers
  • Authoritative! By Priscilla Walmsley–a member of the W3C XML Schema Working Group

To leverage the full power of XML, companies need shared vocabularies to base their documents and scripts upon. XML Schema makes it possible to create those shared vocabularies-and Definitive XML Schema is the authoritative guide to the standard! Written by Priscilla Walmsley, a member of the W3C working group that created XML Schema, this book explains the W3C Recommendation with unprecedented insight and clarity–and introduces practical techniques for writing schemas to support any B2B, Web service, or content processing application. Coverage includes:

  • How XML Schema provides a rigorous, complete standard for modeling XML document structure, content, and datatypes
  • Working with schemas: Schema composition, instance validation, documentation, namespaces, and more
  • XML Schema building blocks: elements, attributes, and types
  • Advanced techniques: type derivation, model groups, substitution groups, identity constraints, redefinition, and much more
  • An in-depth primer on effective schema design, including naming, document structure, and extensibility considerations
  • Transition guidance for experienced DTD developers

Definitive XML Schema brings together expert guidance for schema design, superior approaches to schema development, and the most systematic XML Schema reference on the market. Whether you're a developer, architect, or content specialist, it's the only XML Schema resource you need!

"XML Schema is an incredibly powerful-and complex-document schema language, with such new capabilities as strong typing, modularity, inheritance, and identity constraints. This book guides you through the complexity so you can confidently use that power for your own projects."

–Charles F. Goldfarb

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Developing Feeds with Rss and Atom Developing Feeds with Rss and Atom
Price : $39.95 $5.71
Features :
  1. ISBN13: 9780596008819
  2. Condition: New
  3. Notes: BRAND NEW FROM PUBLISHER! 100% Satisfaction Guarantee. Tracking provided on most orders. Buy with Confidence! Millions of books sold!

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Editorial Review :

Perhaps the most explosive technological trend over the past two years has been blogging. As a matter of fact, it's been reported that the number of blogs during that time has grown from 100,000 to 4.8 million-with no end to this growth in sight.

What's the technology that makes blogging tick? The answer is RSS--a format that allows bloggers to offer XML-based feeds of their content. It's also the same technology that's incorporated into the websites of media outlets so they can offer material (headlines, links, articles, etc.) syndicated by other sites.

As the main technology behind this rapidly growing field of content syndication, RSS is constantly evolving to keep pace with worldwide demand. That's where Developing Feeds with RSS and Atom steps in. It provides bloggers, web developers, and programmers with a thorough explanation of syndication in general and the most popular technologies used to develop feeds.

This book not only highlights all the new features of RSS 2.0-the most recent RSS specification-but also offers complete coverage of its close second in the XML-feed arena, Atom. The book has been exhaustively revised to explain:

  • metadata interpretation
  • the different forms of content syndication
  • the increasing use of web services
  • how to use popular RSS news aggregators on the market
After an introduction that examines Internet content syndication in general (its purpose, limitations, and traditions), this step-by-step guide tackles various RSS and Atom vocabularies, as well as techniques for applying syndication to problems beyond news feeds. Most importantly, it gives you a firm handle on how to create your own feeds, and consume or combine other feeds.

If you're interested in producing your own content feed, Developing Feeds with RSS and Atom is the one book you'll want in hand.

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The Guru's Guide to SQL Server Stored Procedures, XML, and HTML The Guru's Guide to SQL Server Stored Procedures, XML, and HTML
Price : $64.99 $24.82

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SQL Server developers worldwide raved about Ken Henderson's The Guru's Guide to Transact-SQL: its exceptionally clear, conversational explanations, and its powerfully useful projects and code examples. This book helps SQL Server developers take the next step -- building more powerful, robust applications than ever before. Henderson identifies several key areas of SQL Server development that offer the greatest power -- and then covers each of them in exceptional detail. The book includes especially thorough coverage of Transact-SQL stored procedure programming, including features such as extended procedures, database design, and XML that are often disregarded in competitive books. Henderson introduces a method he has developed to add arrays to T-SQL, something previously thought impossible. He offers an ideal balance of theory and code, gradually building on basic techniques to create increasingly sophisticated solutions, and teaching the philosophy of Transact-SQL programming alongside syntax and technique. An accompanying CD-ROM includes extensive source code, including valuable proprietary code that makes T-SQL queries run faster. For every SQL Server developer.

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Questions & Answers
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.)

 

Question : What is the easiest way to export xml from Excel 2007?
Here's the deal:1) I have an Excel file full of data.2) I have a Flash swf that can read in xml.3) I want to export the Excel data into xml, EASILY and WITHOUT DOWNLOADING/INSTALLING anything. The Excel file will be updated regularly, so I need some way to export it quickly and easily to the xml file. I've sifted through several tutorials, and none offer a simple solution.Can you help?Thank you.

Answer:
The export is pretty simple, the concern is more how will it be imported. What can the reader processes.You can create an xml template that will direct Excel how to format the output for you. While this isn't rocket science, it is not trivial either. You will have to do some work.

 

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.

 

Question : How do i create an XML site map to get on search engines?
Apparently you can get yourself (your website) listed on google and other search engines really quickly if you have an XML sitemap and submit it on Google web master tools... Question is, how do i create one?

Answer:
I found a really good website for creating XML sitemaps to submit to Google and other search engines at http://www.createxmlsitemaps.com - you can upload it to Google through google webmaster tools which is linked from that site.

 

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.

 

Question : While using a XML file under action script, the xml file is modified and I am unable to use the modified XM?
I have the following problem1. While using a XML file under action script, the xml file is modified and I am unable to use the modified XML file seamlessly with action-script. 2. While using load vars built in function under action script, I am unable to import PHP values.

Answer:
Could you please share with us your question? We DO have answers, but we need to know what your question is. It looks like you need complete tutorials on XML and PHP.(By the way, the "W3Schools" tutorials are just about the very best, if not THE best free online tutorials.)

 

Question : What is XML and how to I get a tracker to validate my site?
I am trying to get signed on to a blog tracker to track my site. I have a meta tag and everything but it is asking about XML and I have no clue what it is and when I research it is seems as if all the advice is for people who already know a bit about it.. I know NOTHING about it at all. Please help!

Answer:
The Extensible Markup Language (XML) is a general-purpose specification for creating custom markup languages. It is classified as an extensible language because it allows its users to define their own elements. Its primary purpose is to help information systems share structured data, particularly via the Internet.Here is a validator:http://www.w3.org/2001/03/webdata/xsvP.S. w3.org has an HTML and CSS validator as well. w3 is considered the standard in web development.

 

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

 

Question : Xml ...............................?
What is xml in internet/ browsers ?????????

Answer:
Xml :(Extensible Markup Language) >a metalanguage that allows users to define their own customized markup languages, especially in order to display documents on the World Wide Web.

 

Question : How can I store an XML file in a XML type field in an SQL database to later retrieve data from that file to pu?
How can I store an XML file in a XML type field in an SQL Server 2008 Express database to later retrieve data from that file to put it on a Crystal Reports.NET report?

Answer:
no

 

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