ISBN-13: 9781590590034 / Angielski / Miękka / 2002 / 576 str.
XML Programming: Web Applications and Web Services with JSP and ASP provides a fast-moving introduction to the XML family of technologies for programmers. Although written with a focus upon JSP- and ASP-based XML solutions, the book presents the material from a language-independent point of view that benefits all developers, whatever their language. The code is written to be readable by all. Chapter 1 through 3 cover the foundations of XML well-formed and valid documents, DTDs and namespaces but XLink, XPointer, and elements of XSLT are introduced early so the examples can be interesting and useful. Chapter 4 through 6 cover XML processing using SAX, DOM, and XSLT, separately and in various combinations. Each chapter progresses from simple to advanced. Chapter 7 is devoted to the development of a real-world project involving the use of various XML technologies to create an information repository. In the context of the project, we present RDF and the Dublin Core, revisit XPath, XLink, and XPointer, and show how XML data can live inside a relational database. Chapter 8 introduces the newer validation technologies (RELAX NG and XML Schema), in preparation for the final chapter on Web services. In this concluding chapter, the authors not only explain specifications, but also build working examples: The reader is shown, step by step, how to convert a software module into a Web service, how to generate a WSDL description from code, how to use WSDL to generate stubs and skeletons for distributed language-independent applications, and how to register such applications with a UDDI repository, either local or on the Internet. XML Programming: Web Applications and Web Services with JSP and ASP is an indispensable resource for programmers who wish to become proficient in XML technologies and use them for solving large-scale, real-life problems. Alexander Nakhimovsky received an MA in mathematics from Leningrad University in 1972 and a Ph.D. in Linguistics from Cornell in 1979, with a graduate minor in Computer Science. He has been teaching computer science at Colgate University since 1985. He is the author (jointly with Tom Myers) of several books and book chapters, including: Javascript Objects, 1999, Professional Java XML Programming, 1999, and three chapters in Professional JavaServer Programming, J2EE edition, 2000 (all three from WROX), as well as books and articles on linguistics and AI. Tom Myers studied physics in Bogota and Buenos Aires before receiving his BA from St. John's College, Santa Fe (1975) and a Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Pennsylvania (1980). A software developer and consultant, he has been working mostly on Java/XML projects for the past few years; some earlier research in parallelism and in functional programming languages seems to be coming back to life, within XSLT. In addition to joint publications with Alexander Nakhimovsky, he is the author of a book and several articles on theoretical computer science."