Java and XML - Brett McLaughlin

Java and XML

Buch
512 Seiten
2000
O'Reilly Media (Verlag)
978-0-596-00016-5 (ISBN)
31,95 inkl. MwSt
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Java and XML share many features that are ideal for building Web-based enterprise applications. This manual shows how to put the two together, building applications in which both the code and the data are truly portable.
XML has been the biggest buzzword on the Internet community for the past year. But how do you cut through all the hype and actually put it to work? Java revolutionized the programming world by providing a platform-independent programming language. XML takes the revolution a step further by providing a platform-independent language for interchanging data. Java and XML share many features that are ideal for building Web-based enterprise applications, such as platform-independence, extensibility, reusability, global language (Unicode) support, and both are based on industry standards. Together Java and XML allow enterprises to simplify and lower cost of information sharing and data exchange. Java and XML shows you how to put the two together, building real-world applications in which both the code and the data are truly portable.
This book covers: The basics of XML Using standard Java APIs to parse XML Designing new document types using DTDs and Schemas Writing programs that generate XML data Transforming XML into different forms using XSL transformations (XSL/T) XML-RPC Using a web publishing framework like Apache-Cocoon XML as a configuration language This is the first book to cover the most recent versions of the DOM specification (DOM 2), the SAX API (SAX 2) and Sun's Java API for XML.

Brett McLaughlin has been working in computers since the Logo days. (Remember the little triangle?) He currently specializes in building application infrastructure using Java and Java-related technologies. He has spent the last several years implementing these infrastructures at Nextel Communications and Allegiance Telecom, Inc. Brett is one of the co-founders of the Java Apache project Turbine, which builds a reusable component architecture for web application development using Java servlets. He is also a contributor of the EJBoss project, an open source EJB application server, and Cocoon, an open source XML web-publishing engine. He is author of the soon-to-be-released O'Reilly book, XML for Java Developers, as well as an O'Reilly book set for release late in 2000, Enterprise Applications in Java. These books and projects all focus on using XML and the J2EE platform in mission-critical, high-performance, distributed systems.

Preface. 1. Introduction What Is It? How Do I Use It? Why Should I Use It? What's Next? 2. Creating XML An XML Document The Header The Content What's Next? 3. Parsing XML Getting Prepared SAX Readers Content Handlers Error Handlers A Better Way to Load a Parser "Gotcha!" What's Next? 4. Constraining XML Why Constrain XML Data? Document Type Definitions XML Schema What's Next? 5. Validating XML Configuring the Parser Output of XML Validation The DTDHandler Interface "Gotcha!" What's Next? 6. Transforming XML The Purpose The Components The Syntax What's Next? 7. Traversing XML Getting the Output Getting the Input The Document Object Model (DOM) "Gotcha!" What's Next? 8. JDOM Parsers and the Java API for XML Parsing JDOM: Another API? Getting a Document Using a Document Outputting a Document What's Next? 9. Web Publishing Frameworks Selecting a Framework Installation Using a Publishing Framework XSP Cocoon 2.0 and Beyond What's Next? 10. XML-RPC RPC Versus RMI Saying Hello Putting the Load on the Server The Real World What's Next? 11. XML for Configurations EJB Deployment Descriptors Creating an XML Configuration File Reading an XML Configuration File The Real World What's Next? 12. Creating XML with Java Loading the Data Modifying the Data XML from Scratch The Real World What's Next? 13. Business-to-Business The Foobar Public Library mytechbooks.com Push Versus Pull The Real World What's Next? 14. XML Schema To DTD or Not To DTD Java Parallels What's Next? A. API Reference B. SAX 2.0 Features and Properties Index

Erscheint lt. Verlag 11.7.2000
Zusatzinfo Ill.
Verlagsort Sebastopol
Sprache englisch
Maße 178 x 232 mm
Gewicht 950 g
Einbandart kartoniert
Themenwelt Informatik Programmiersprachen / -werkzeuge Java
Mathematik / Informatik Informatik Web / Internet
ISBN-10 0-596-00016-2 / 0596000162
ISBN-13 978-0-596-00016-5 / 9780596000165
Zustand Neuware
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