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Database and XML Technologies: First International XML Database Symposium, XSYM 2003, Berlin, Germany, September 8, 2003, Proceedings

May 6, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the First International XML Database Symposium, XSym 2003, held in Berlin, Germany in September 2003. The 18 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 65 submissions. The papers are organized in topical sections on XML-relational database management systems, XML query processing, systems and tools for XML data processing, XML access structures, stream processing and updates, and design issues.

Database and XML Technologies: First International XML Database Symposium, XSYM 2003, Berlin, Germany, September 8, 2003, Proceedings

Filed Under: XML Books Tagged With: 2003, Berlin, Berlin Germany, Data Access, Data Processing, Data Structures, Database, Database Management Systems, Database Symposium, First, Germany, International, Issues Database, Proceedings, Processing Systems, Product Description, Query Tools, Refereed Proceedings, Relational Database Management, Relational Database Management Systems, September, Submissions, Symposium, Technologies, Topical Sections, Xml Access, Xml Data, Xml Database, Xml Query, Xml Technologies, XSym

XML in a Nutshell, 2nd Edition

April 29, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description
This powerful new edition provides developers with a comprehensive guide to the rapidly evolving XML space. Serious users of XML will find just about everything they need, from fundamental syntax rules, to details of vocabulary creation, to transformations, to APIs used for processing XML documents. XML in a Nutshell, in fact, is the only reference of its kind among XML books. Whether you’re a Web designer using SVG to add vector graphics to web pages, or a C++ programmer using SOAP to serialize objects into a remote database, this expanded second edition provides a thorough explanation of all the basic rules — including XML, DTDs, namespaces, Unicode, XML Schemas, XSLT, Xpath, SAX, and DOM. If you need explanation of how a technology works, or just need to quickly find the precise syntax for a particular piece, this is the place to look. XML in a Nutshell is an essential guide for developers who need to create XML-based file formats and data structures for use in any XML document.Amazon.com Review
Continuing in the tradition of the Nutshell series, XML in a Nutshell provides a dense tutorial on its subject, as well as a useful day-to-day reference. While the reader isn’t expected to have prior expertise in XML, this book is most effective as an add-on to a more introductory tutorial because of its relatively fast pace.

The authors set out to systematically–and rapidly–cover the basics of XML first, namely the history of the markup language and the various languages and technologies that compose the standard. In this first section, they discuss the basics of XML markup, Document Type Definitions (DTDs), namespaces, and Unicode. From there, the authors move into “narrative-centric documents” in a section that appropriately focuses on the application of XML to books, articles, Web pages and other readable content.

This book definitely presupposes in the reader an aptitude for picking up concepts quickly and for rapidly building cumulative knowledge. Code examples are used–only to illustrate the particular point in question–but not in excess. The book gets into “data-centric” XML, exploring the difference between the object-driven Document Object Model (DOM) and the event-driven Simple API for XML (SAX). However, these areas are a little underpowered and offer a bit less detail about this key area than the reader will expect.

At the core of any Nutshell book is the reference section, and the installment found inside this text is no exception. Here, the XML 1.0 standard, XPath, XSLT, DOM, SAX, and character sets are covered. Some material that is covered earlier in the book–such as Cascading Style Sheets (CSS)–is not re-articulated, however. XML in a Nutshell is not the only book on XML you should have, but it is definitely one that no XML coder should be without. –Stephen W. Plain

Topics covered:

  • XML history
  • Document Type Definitions (DTDs)
  • Namespaces
  • Internationalization
  • XML-based data formats
  • XHTML
  • XSL
  • XPath
  • XLink
  • XPointer
  • Cascading Style Sheets (CSS)
  • XSL-FO
  • Document Object Model (DOM)
  • Simple API for XML (SAX)

XML in a Nutshell, 2nd Edition

Filed Under: XML Books Tagged With: Amazon, Aptitude, Books Articles, C Programmer, Data Structures, Document Type Definitions, Edition, Everything They Need From, Fundamental Syntax, Introductory Tutorial, Markup Language, Nutshell, Nutshell Series, Precise Syntax, Syntax Rules, Technology Works, Vector Graphics, XML Books, Xml Document, Xml Documents, Xml Namespaces, Xml Schemas

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