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Essential XML Quick Reference: A Programmer’s Reference to XML, XPath, XSLT, XML Schema, SOAP, and More

April 29, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description
This book is for anyone working with today’s mainstream XML technologies. It was specifically designed to serve as a handy but thorough quick reference that answers the most common XML-related technical questions. It goes beyond the traditional pocket reference design by providing complete coverage of each topic along with plenty of meaningful examples. Each chapter provides a brief introduction, which is followed by the detailed reference information. This approach assumes the reader has a basic understanding of the given topic. The detailed outline (at the beginning), index (in the back), bleeding tabs (along the side), and the page headers/footers were designed to help readers quickly find answers to their questions.

Essential XML Quick Reference: A Programmer’s Reference to XML, XPath, XSLT, XML Schema, SOAP, and More

Filed Under: XML Books Tagged With: Essential, Handy, Mainstream, More, Page Headers, Pocket Reference, Product Description, Programmer's, Quick, Quick Reference, Reference, Reference Design, Schema, SOAP, Tabs, Technical Questions, Xml Programmer, Xml Reference, Xml Schema, Xml Soap, Xml Technologies, Xpath, XSLT

Web Service and SOA Technologies

April 28, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description
This very insightful book devotes a chapter to each of several service oriented architecture (SOA) and web service-related technologies. For each chapter, an overview is given along with the strengths, weaknesses, alternatives and common mistakes for that technology. For example, there are chapters devoted to SOAs, Web Services, Enterprise Service Buses, BPEL, Governance, .Net, J2EE, Message Oriented Middleware, XML, REST and ROA, SOAP, WSRP and WSDL. There are also chapters on a number of other related technologies like HTTP, PHP, XML Schemas, HTML and horizontal and vertical scaling – each chapter emphasizing common mistakes that bring down SOA projects. The book is chalked full of useful insights and pitfalls to avoid, but what makes the presentation truly unique is that each topic is presented in an engaging and humorous manner. Genuinely funny footnotes permeate the text and Dilbert-esque cartoons that make a point about each technology cause very boring topics to become palatable. If you’re a project manager or software architect who can’t name three ways technologies like… say… web services or XML threatens projects then you should buy this book. It’s also a good book to read to have something intelligent to say about popular technologies during job interviews and you’ll have a few chuckles while gaining those insights.

Web Service and SOA Technologies

Filed Under: SOA Books Tagged With: Enterprise Service, Footnotes, Governance, Humorous Manner, Insightful Book, Job Interviews, Message Oriented Middleware, Pitfalls, Product Description, Related Technologies, Service, Service Buses, Service Oriented Architecture, Service Oriented Architecture Soa, Software Architect, Strengths Weaknesses, Technologies, Three Ways, Web Service, Wsrp, Xml Html, Xml Soap
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