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Showing posts with label XML. Show all posts
Showing posts with label XML. Show all posts

Friday, 17 June 2011

XML.NET. XML und Web Services mit dem .NET-Framework: By Solutionsfree.blogspot.com(Free Books and Solutions Manual,Free eBooks,BSCS,BCS,Free Downloadable Books)


Karsten Samaschke, “XML.NET. XML und Web Services mit dem .NET-Framework”
Entwickler.Press | 2006 | ISBN: 393504268X | 345 pages | PDF | 2,4 MB
XML ist inzwischen aus der Webentwicklung nicht mehr wegzudenken. Wer bei der Entwicklung von Webseiten VB.NET einsetzt, hat in diesem Buch einen wertvollen Coach an seiner Seite. Themen wie XML-Generierung, XPath, XML Web Services, XSLT Stylesheets oder XSL-FO werden erklärt und durch viele praxisbezogene Beispiele veranschaulicht. Erschließen Sie sich diese zukunftsträchtigen Technologien und profitieren Sie von einem langlebigen Nachschlagewerk.
to download follow the link below:

Java(tm) and XML Your visual blueprint for creating Java-enhanced Web programs: By Solutionsfree.blogspot.com(Free Books and Solutions Manual,Free eBooks,BSCS,BCS,Free Downloadable Books)


Java(tm) and XML Your visual blueprint for creating Java-enhanced Web programs
Publisher: Visual | 2002-05-01 | ISBN 0764536834 | PDF | 350 pages | 9.7 MB
Product Description:

Learn the concepts, syntax and APIs (Application Program Interface) of Java.
Includes information about DTDs, datatypes, child data, Cascading Style Sheets, XSL, data islands, ActiveXmetadata, JavaScript, Xlink, Xpointer, and more!
ABOUT THE CD-ROM
The CD will include coding examples.
Includes fully searchable e-version of the book.

to download follow the link below:

The Rhetorical Nature of XML: Constructing Knowledge in Networked Environments: By Solutionsfree.blogspot.com(Free Books and Solutions Manual,Free eBooks,BSCS,BCS,Free Downloadable Books)


The Rhetorical Nature of XML: Constructing Knowledge in Networked Environments

The Rhetorical Nature of XML: Constructing Knowledge in Networked Environments

Product Description
The Rhetorical Nature of XML is the first volume to combine rhetoric, XML, and knowledge management in a substantive manner. It serves as a primer on XML and XML-related technologies, illustrating how the naming of XML elements can be understood as a rhetorical act, and detailing the essentials of knowledge management practices that illustrate the need for intelligently conceived databases in organizations.


About the Author
University of Central Florida

to download follow the link below:

Database and XML Technologies: 6th International XML Database Symposium, XSym 2009, Lyon, France, August 24, 2009: By Solutionsfree.blogspot.com(Free Books and Solutions Manual,Free eBooks,BSCS,BCS,Free Downloadable Books)



Database and XML Technologies: 6th International XML Database Symposium, XSym 2009, Lyon, France, August 24, 2009
Database and XML Technologies: 6th International XML Database Symposium, XSym 2009, Lyon, France, August 24, 2009
Product Description
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 6th International XML Database Symposium, XSym 2009, held in Lyon, France, in August 2009 in conjunction with the International Conference on Very Large Data Bases, VLDB 2009.

The 8 revised full papers together with 7 short paper were carefully reviewed and selected from 26 submissions. Covering all current aspects of core database technology for XML data management, XML and data integration, and development and deployment of XML applications, the papers are organized in topical sections on XML twig queries, query execution, xml document parsing and compression, XQuery and XML transaction management and schema design.
to download follow the link below:

Services and Business Computing Solutions With Xml: Applications for Quality Management and Best Processes: By Solutionsfree.blogspot.com(Free Books and Solutions Manual,Free eBooks,BSCS,BCS,Free Downloadable Books)


Services and Business Computing Solutions With Xml: Applications for Quality Management and Best Processes

Services and Business Computing Solutions With Xml: Applications for Quality Management and Best Processes

Product Description
Commercial systems built today are increasingly using XML technologies for storing any amount of text or data. Services and Business Computing Solutions with XML: Applications for Quality Management and Best Processes collects the latest research for academicians and practitioners that describes the use and synergy between data structure technologies. This book explores and investigates various issues of XML data and related applications summarized by Web services.

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Thursday, 16 June 2011

XML and Web Servises Unleashed: By Solutionsfree.blogspot.com(Free Books and Solutions Manual,Free eBooks,BSCS,BCS,Free Downloadable Books)



XML and Web Servises Unleashed By Ron Schmelzer,Travis Vandersypen and more…
Publisher: Sams 2002 | 1200 Pages | ISBN: 0672323419 | PDF | 6 MB
The Extensible Markup Language is changing the way that information is being stored and exchanged. It is also changing the very way that we think about data. XML Unleashed allows you to unlock this new power and get you well on your way towards developing XML applications and systems that enable your most important business processes, or your simplest visions for data representation and exchange. Written for those already familiar with many of the concepts of XML, but still not sure how to make best use of the technologies, this book helps you become a more advanced user of XML. This book covers all the necessary topics from the basics of Document Type Definitions (DTDs) to the more advanced topics in XML database integration and the semantic web. This book is designed to be the only XML book that the reader will ever need on their shelf. XML is a standard and has become the common thread facilitating very different computer applications communicate by categorizing and tagging the data, reading, interpreting, sorting and linking the results. Within this book you will find coverage of important existing and emerging XML Standards as well as many varied and popular implementations of XML in this 21st century.We include WSDL, UDDI, SVG, ebXML Microsoft’s .NET, which is the world’s largest XML implementation to date and the Semantic Web which is just now being articulated.
to download follow the links below:


http://rapidshare.com/files/251459132/XML.Web.Servises.Unleashed.rar

JSP and XML Integrating XML and Web Services in Your JSP Application : By Solutionsfree.blogspot.com




JSP and XML Integrating XML and Web Services in Your JSP Application
Casey Kochmer, Erica Frandsen, «JSP and XML Integrating XML and Web Services in Your JSP Application»
Addison Wesley | ISBN: 0672323540 | 2002 | CHM | 592 pages | 2.34 MB
The first Internet revolution was all about delivering information to people. We are now in the second revolution, which focuses on delivering information to systems. XML is the tool that makes this new revolution a reality, and Web services are the methods by which businesses will drive system-to-system communication. JSP(TM) and XML takes you beyond the basics, giving you practical advice and in-depth coverage. In the book, you’ll learn the technologies and techniques needed to create your own Web services for use in JSP applications. Written by programmers for programmers, the book will help you successfully utilize these exciting technologies with minimal hassle and maximum speed.
to Download follow the links below:
http://uploading.com/files/JZLY9XZN/jsp-and-xml-integrating-xml-and-web-serv…chm.html
http://hotfile.com/dl/8275038/283ff1b/jsp-and-xml-integrating-xml-and-web-services.chm.html
http://rapidshare.com/files/254106742/jsp-and-xml-integrating-xml-and-web-services.chm

XML and Web Servises Unleashed : By Solutionsfree.blogspot.com








XML and Web Servises Unleashed By Ron Schmelzer,Travis Vandersypen and more…
Publisher: Sams 2002 | 1200 Pages | ISBN: 0672323419 | PDF | 6 MB
The Extensible Markup Language is changing the way that information is being stored and exchanged. It is also changing the very way that we think about data. XML Unleashed allows you to unlock this new power and get you well on your way towards developing XML applications and systems that enable your most important business processes, or your simplest visions for data representation and exchange. Written for those already familiar with many of the concepts of XML, but still not sure how to make best use of the technologies, this book helps you become a more advanced user of XML. This book covers all the necessary topics from the basics of Document Type Definitions (DTDs) to the more advanced topics in XML database integration and the semantic web. This book is designed to be the only XML book that the reader will ever need on their shelf. XML is a standard and has become the common thread facilitating very different computer applications communicate by categorizing and tagging the data, reading, interpreting, sorting and linking the results. Within this book you will find coverage of important existing and emerging XML Standards as well as many varied and popular implementations of XML in this 21st century.We include WSDL, UDDI, SVG, ebXML Microsoft’s .NET, which is the world’s largest XML implementation to date and the Semantic Web which is just now being articulated.
to download follow the links below:




http://rapidshare.com/files/251459132/XML.Web.Servises.Unleashed.rar


Thursday, 26 May 2011

Pro PHP XML and Web Services:

Pro PHP XML and Web Services
Pro PHP XML and Web Services
Product Description
I would highly recommend this as a resource for any developers who want to really dig in and solidify their working knowledge of PHP and web services, or just want to explore the nuances and complexities of XML DTDs and namespaces.
— Nathan Smith, Godbit Project
Pro PHP XML and Web Services is the authoritative guide to using the XML features of PHP 5 and PHP 6. No other book covers XML and Web Services in PHP as deeply as this title. The first four chapters introduce the core concepts of XML required for proficiency, and will bring you up to speed on the terminology and key concepts you need to proceed with the rest of the book. Next, the book explores utilizing XML and Web Services with PHP5. Topics include DOM, SimpleXML, SAX, xmlReader, XSLT, RDF, RSS, WDDX, XML-RPC, REST, SOAP, and UDDI.
Author Robert Richards, a major contributor to the PHP XML codebase, is a leading expert in the PHP community. In this book, Richards covers all topics in depth, blending theory with practical examples. Youll find case studies for the most popular web services like Amazon, Google, eBay, and Yahoo. The book also covers XML capabilities, demonstrated through informative examples, in the PEAR libraries.
to download follow the link below:


ASP.NET Unleashed, 2nd Edition (book + source code):


Throughout the more than 1,400 pages readers are shown how to develop state-of-the-art Web applications using Microsoft’s powerful ASP.NET. It progresses through Web Forms basics, advanced page development, ADO.NET and XML, securing Web applications, XML Web Services, leveraging the .NET Framework, building custom controls and powerful sample applications. This is a resource that will be referenced over and over

to download follow the link below:

http://rapidshare.com/files/243896475/asp.netUnleashed.rar


Monday, 23 May 2011

Processing XML with Java (Online)

This book is organized as an advanced tutorial that can also serve as a solid and comprehensive reference.

The first chapter covers the bare minimum material needed to start working with XML, though for the most part this is intended more as a review for readers who’ve already read other, more basic books than as a comprehensive introduction. The second chapter introduces RSS, XML-RPC, and SOAP, the XML applications we’ll be using for examples in the rest of the book.
This is followed by two chapters on generating XML from your own programs (a subject which is all too often presented as a lot more complicated than it actually is). The first covers generating XML directly from code. The second covers converting legacy data in other formats to XML. The remaining bulk of the book is devoted to the major APIs for processing XML.
Read Processing XML with Java (Online)


Extensible Markup Language (XML)

This document has been reviewed by W3C Members and other interested parties and has been endorsed by the Director as a W3C Recommendation. It is a stable document and may be used as reference material or cited as a normative reference from another document.

W3C’s role in making the Recommendation is to draw attention to the specification and to promote its widespread deployment. This enhances the functionality and interoperability of the Web.
Download Extensible Markup Language (XML) (pdf)


XML programming with SQL/XML and XQuery

Most business data are stored in relational database systems, and SQL (Structured Query Language) is used for data retrieval and manipulation. With XML (Extensible Markup Language) rapidly becoming the de facto standard for retrieving and exchanging data, new functionality is expected from traditional databases.
Existing SQL applications will evolve to retrieve relational data as XML data using database or SQL extensions for XML. New XML data will be stored, searched, and manipulated in the database as a “first class” citizen along with existing relational data.
Furthermore, new applications will emerge that solely operate in terms of XML. These new XML applications operate on the same database using an XML query language, XQuery. In this paper, we describe an integrated database architecture that enables SQL applications with XML extensions as well as XQuery applications to operate on the same data. The architecture allows for a seamless flow from relational data to XML and back.
Download XML programming with SQL/XML and XQuery (pdf)


ADO.NET: From Novice to Pro, Visual Basic .NET Edition

Designed to get programmers up to professional levels as fast as possible, ADO.NET: From Novice to Pro is geared toward developers who have little or no .NET or ADO.NET experience, as well as programmers who are not yet comfortable with database programming. Best-selling author Peter Wright painlessly moves readers from simple database access to the sophisticated manipulation of XML documents.

The book begins by showing you the basic architecture of ADO.NET, and then provides you with the tools you’ll need to work with data providers and the new Connection, Command, and DataSet objects. Wright then drills down into the topics that are essential for you as a professional developer to understand, including transactions, concurrency, typed DataSets, and the use of XML with ADO.NET.
Through numerous hands-on examples and working code that is adaptable to individual projects, you’ll learn how to create fast and powerful ADO.NET enterprise applications. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to work at a professional level utilizing Microsoft’s most powerful data-access technology.
VISUAL STUDIO .NET’S support for the console (text-based output into a DOS-like window) is wonderful. By using the console application templates it’s dead easy to knock out programs to try out ideas, test classes and, of course, focus on learning important concepts. However, in the world of production applications, the GUI is king, whether it’s deployed as part of a desktop application or over the Web using ASP.NET.
In this chapter and the next you’ll look at those two things: using ADO in Windows Forms-based desktop applications and using ADO in Web-based applications. Before going any further, though, I need to evangelize a little, particularly for those of you out there who’ve deployed production applications prior to .NET.
You see, developers are a strange bunch. On the one hand, they all love powerful frameworks, such as .NET, and truly appreciate the amount of work a powerful, well-written framework can save them. On the other hand, there comes a point where a framework can do so much and take so much out of the hands of the programmer that many developers resist its adoption. Sometimes this resistance is well placed. Take Visual Basic, for example (not VB .NET). VB has historically included a number of controls for data binding-binding data from data sources and automatically displaying it on-screen through bound controls. Historically, this always involved something known as a data control. On the surface it looked neat: Stick a data control on a form, bind a number of other GUI controls to the data control, and then at runtime just load some data into the data control and you instantly have a form of data the user can view, update, and navigate, with little or no effort on the part of the developer. This power, though, also took away control from the developer. In earlier versions of VB in particular, developers taking this approach were forced to fight the data control to claw back some degree of control over how the user worked with data, and they inevitably ended up writing more code than if they had just loaded the data and manually populated the controls on the form themselves. The data control was also somewhat inefficient in the way it did things.
For these reasons, there’s a lot of resistance to “bound” user interfaces. Visual Studio .NET and the user interface controls in the .NET Framework support data binding, but it is quite unlike anything you’ve seen before. The decision to use bound controls in .NET is not a decision to forgo control and power in the pursuit of an easy life. The bound controls in .NET do not limit the control programmers have over their data access architecture, and they do not impose unwanted restrictions on the design of the GUI. Bound controls in .NET are incredibly powerful, stunningly easy to use, and if you have experience with prior versions of ADO, DAO, and RDO, you should be pleasantly surprised by just what you can accomplish with them.
In this chapter I’ll lead you through some hands-on examples of common ADO-related GUI tasks. You’ll see how to use a DataGrid, how to use the Visual Studio wizards and designers to create your DataAdapters and Connections with little or no code, and how to data bind any visual control you choose. In the next chapter you’ll drill down in more detail and learn how to take control of data binding through code, and also how to validate and explore data in visual bound controls, again through code.
Download ADO.NET: From Novice to Pro, Visual Basic .NET Edition


XML programming with SQL/XML and XQuery

Most business data are stored in relational database systems, and SQL (Structured Query Language) is used for data retrieval and manipulation. With XML (Extensible Markup Language) rapidly becoming the de facto standard for retrieving and exchanging data, new functionality is expected from traditional databases.
Existing SQL applications will evolve to retrieve relational data as XML data using database or SQL extensions for XML. New XML data will be stored, searched, and manipulated in the database as a “first class” citizen along with existing relational data.
Furthermore, new applications will emerge that solely operate in terms of XML. These new XML applications operate on the same database using an XML query language, XQuery. In this paper, we describe an integrated database architecture that enables SQL applications with XML extensions as well as XQuery applications to operate on the same data. The architecture allows for a seamless flow from relational data to XML and back.
Download XML programming with SQL/XML and XQuery (pdf)


OpenOffice.org XML Essentials

You should read this book if you want to extract data from an OpenOffice.org document, convert your data to an OpenOffice.org document, or simply find out how OpenOffice.org stores its data “under the hood.”

Before we can talk about OpenOffice.org, we have to look at the current state of proprietary office suites and applications. In this world, all your documents are stored in a proprietary (often binary) format. As long as you stay within the office suite, this is not a problem. You can transfer data from one part of the suite to another; you can transfer text from the word processor to a presentation, or you can grab a set of numbers from the spreadsheet and convert it to a table in your word processing document.
The problems begin when you want to do a transfer that wasn’t intended by the authors of the office suite. Because the internal structure of the data is unknown to you, you can’t write a program that creates a new word processing document consisting of all the headings from a different document. If you need to do something that wasn’t provided by the software vendor, or if you must process the data with an application external to the office suite, you will have to convert that data to some neutral or “universal” format such as Rich Text Format (RTF) or comma-separated values (CSV) for import into the other applications. You have to rely on the kindness of strangers to include these conversions in the first place. Furthermore, some conversions can result in loss of formatting information that was stored with your data.
Note also that your data can become inaccessible when the software vendor moves to a new internal format and stops supporting your current version. (Some people actually suggest that this is not cause for complaint since, by putting your data into the vendor’s proprietary format, the vendor has now become a co-owner of your data. This is, and I mean this in the nicest possible way, a dangerously idiotic idea.)
OpenOffice.org has as its mission “[t]o create, as a community, the leading international office suite that will run on all major platforms and provide access to all functionality and data through open-component based APIs and an XML-based file format.”


Using OASIS OpenDocument XML

You should read this book if you want to extract data from OpenDocument files, convert your data to OpenDocument format, or simply find out how the format works.

If you need to know absolutely everything about the OpenDocument format, you should download the Open Document Format for Office Applications (OpenDocument) 1.0 in PDF form from http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/download.php/12572/OpenDocument-v1.0-os.pdf or as an OpenOffice.org 1.0 format file from http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/download.php/12028/office-spec-1.0-cd-3.sxw.. That document was a major source of reference for this book.
If you simply want to use OpenOffice.org or KOffice to create documents, you need only download the software from http://www.openoffice.org/ or http://www.koffice.org/ and start using it. There’s no need for you to know what’s going on behind the scenes unless you wish to satisfy your lively intellectual curiosity.
The examples in this book are written using a variety of tools and languages. I prefer to use open-source tools which work cross-platform, so most of the programming examples will be in Perl or Java. I use the Xalan XSLT processor, which you may find at http://xml.apache.org. All the examples in this book have been tested with OpenOffice.org version 1.9.100, Perl 5.8.0, and Xalan-J 2.6.0 on a Linux system using the SuSE 9.2 distribution. This is not to slight any other applications that use OpenDocument (such as KOffice) nor any other operating systems (MacOS X or Windows); it’s just that I used the tools at hand.


Beginning JSP 2(Using JSP and XML Together)

Let Beginning JSP 2 be your guide as you begin using JSP. This comprehensive guide starts by steering you through your first JSP application. It reviews HTML, and provides you with a useful overview of JSP. You’ll then be ready to start learning one of the core techniques in JSP: pulling data from a database and working with that data.

When you’ve mastered this technique, you’ll be ready to branch out powerfully into other JSP topics: variables, scope, flow control, and code reuse for productive time management. Finally, the book shows you how you can use JSP with XML and gives you a taste of some advanced topics, including using Struts and the Model View Controller.
This book’s step-by-step examples explain the techniques behind the code. The authors include realistic scenarios wherever possible to build your knowledge and confidence in JSP. After reading this book, you’ll have the knowledge and skills to enter the web development and Java development industries. All you need to begin this journey is a basic understanding of HTML and Java.
EXTENSIBLE MARKUP LANGUAGE (XML) has become the de facto standard for data interchange on the Internet these days. It has revolutionized the way the Web works by defining a standard for electronic exchange of information. It has done the same thing for data that Java did for code-it has made it portable.
What is XML, and why is it important? We’ll try and answer these and other questions you may have in this chapter, and we’ll show how you can use XML in your JavaServer Pages (JSP) applications.
Introducing XML
Before delving deeper into the guts of XML, you’ll examine the acronym XML itself. X, for Extensible, means you can extend the language to meet various requirements. ML, for Markup Language, means it’s a language for identifying structures within a document.
XML is extensible because it isn’t a fixed language. You can extend it to create your own languages in order to match your particular needs. In a way, XML isn’t really a language in itself; rather, it’s a standard for defining other languages to fit various computing scenarios, typically in the business or academic spheres.
A markup language is used to add meaning to different parts of a document. Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) is another type of markup language. Its tags give particular meaning to parts of a document. For instance, the <table> tag marks up a section to represent a table.
To clarify things further, you’ll look at some XML documents. The following is a file called web.xml used to configure Tomcat:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> <web-app xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/j2ee
<html>  <head><title>A date formatting form</title></head>   <body>   <form 
In many ways, XML is similar to HTML. Both these markup languages use tags to enclose items with particular meaning; these tags are enclosed within angle brackets, as in <table>, <web-app>, <html>, and so on. Also, there will be a corresponding closing tag that has the same name but starts with </. These closing tags mark the end of the item referred to by the tag, and in XML, the whole section including the start tag and the end tag is known as an element. Note that although many HTML elements don’t require a closing tag (such as <p> and <br>), XML elements must always have a start and an end tag. Both HTML and XML allow elements to be contained, or nested, within each other, as you can see from the previous examples (the <tr> element is nested within the <table> element because it appears after the <table> start tag and before the </table> end tag). However, XML is much stricter than HTML in this regard because it doesn’t allow elements to overlap (that is, if an element’s start tag appears after another’s start tag, the nested element’s end tag must appear before the other’s end tag).
There are many other ways in which XML is quite different from HTML. XML isn’t limited to a preexisting set of tags, as HTML is, and although HTML is primarily concerned with describing how a document should be laid out in a browser, XML documents are more concerned with describing the data contained in a document, and they’re generally quite independent of how that data may be rendered for display.
Download Beginning JSP 2 (Using JSP and XML Together)


Developing XML Solutions with JavaServer Pages Technology

XML (eXtensible Markup Language) is a set of syntax rules and guidelines for defining text-based markup languages. XML languages have a number of uses including:

      • Exchanging information
      • Defining document types
      • Specifying messages
Information that is expressed in a structured, text-based format can easily be transmitted between, transformed, and interpreted by entities that understand the structure. In this way XML brings the same cross-platform benefits to information exchange as the JavaTM programming language has for processing.
Download Developing XML Solutions with JavaServer Pages Technology (pdf)


Designing Web Services with the J2EE 1.4 Platform JAX-RPC SOAP, and XML Technologies

THE realm of Web services software components that are programmatically accessible over standard Internet protocols is expanding rapidly due to the growing need for application-to-application communication and interoperability.

Web services expose a standard interface that is platform and technology independent. By conforming to accepted industry-wide standards, Web services provide a means of communication among software applications running on different platforms and written in different application development languages and that present dynamic context-driven information to the user.
Download Designing Web Services with the J2EE 1.4 Platform JAX-RPC SOAP, and XML Technologies