Produktbild: XML For Dummies

XML For Dummies

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

20.05.2005

Verlag

KNV Besorgung

Seitenzahl

384

Maße (L/B/H)

23,5/19,1/2,1 cm

Gewicht

719 g

Auflage

4. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-7645-8845-7

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

20.05.2005

Verlag

KNV Besorgung

Seitenzahl

384

Maße (L/B/H)

23,5/19,1/2,1 cm

Gewicht

719 g

Auflage

4. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-7645-8845-7

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: XML For Dummies
  • Introduction 1

    About This Book 1

    Conventions Used in This Book 2

    Foolish Assumptions 3

    How This Book Is Organized 4

    Part I: XML Basics 4

    Part II: XML and the Web 4

    Part III: Building in Validation with DTDs and Schemas 5

    Part IV: Transforming and Processing XML 6

    Part V: XML Application Development 6

    Part VI: The Part of Tens 7

    Glossary 7

    Icons Used in This Book 7

    Where to Go from Here 8

    Part I: XML Basics 9

    Chapter 1: Getting to Know XML 11

    XML (eXtreMely cooL) 12

    Mocking up your own markup 12

    Separating data and context 12

    Making information portable 13

    XML means business 13

    Figuring Out What XML Is Good For 14

    Classifying information 14

    Enforcing rules on your data 15

    Outputting information in a variety of ways 16

    Using the same data across platforms 17

    Beyond the Hype: What XML Isn't 18

    It's not just for Web pages anymore 19

    It's not a database 20

    It's not a programming language 20

    Building XML Documents 21

    Chapter 2: Using XML for Many Purposes 23

    Moving Legacy Data to XML 23

    The Many Faces of XML 24

    Creating XML-enabled Web pages 24

    Print publishing with XML 25

    Using XML for business forms 28

    Incorporating XML into business processes 29

    Serving up XML from a database 31

    Alphabet Soup: Even More XML 31

    Chapter 3: Slicing and Dicing Data Categories: The Art of Taxonomy 33

    Taking Stock of Your Data 33

    Looking at business practices and partners 34

    Gathering some content 34

    Checking whether a DTD or schema already exists 35

    Searching for a schema repository 36

    Breaking Down Data in Different Ways 37

    Winnowing out the wheat from the chaff 38

    Types of data that can be stored in XML 39

    Developing Your Taxonomy 39

    Testing Your Taxonomy 41

    Using trial and error for the best fit 41

    Testing your content analysis 42

    Looking Ahead to Validation 43

    Part II: XML and the Web 45

    Chapter 4: Adding XHTML for the Web 47

    HTML, XML, and XHTML 47

    What HTML does best 48

    The limits of HTML 49

    Comparing XML and HTML 50

    Using XML to describe data 51

    The benefits of using HTML 53

    The benefits of using XML 53

    XHTML Makes the Move to XML Syntax 54

    Making the switch 55

    Every element must be closed 56

    Empty elements must be formatted correctly 56

    Tags must be properly nested 57

    Case makes a difference 57

    Attribute values are in quotation marks 58

    Converting a document from HTML to XHTML 59

    The Role of DOCTYPE Declarations 62

    Chapter 5: Putting Together an XML File 65

    Anatomy of an XML File 65

    The XML declaration 67

    Marking up your content 68

    Playing by the Rules: Well-Formed Documents 74

    Adding Style for the Web 76

    Seeking Validation with DTD and XML Schema 78

    Why describe XML documents? 79

    Choosing between DTD and XML Schema 80

    Chapter 6: Adding Character(s) to XML 83

    About Character Encodings 84

    Introducing Unicode 85

    Character Sets, Fonts, Scripts, and Glyphs 87

    For Each Character, a Code 88

    Key Character Sets 89

    Using Unicode Characters 91

    Finding Character Entity Information 93

    Chapter 7: Handling Formatting with CSS 95

    Viewing XML on the Web with CSS 96

    Basic CSS Formatting: CSS1 97

    The Icing on the Cake: CSS2 98

    Building a CSS Stylesheet 98

    Adding CSS to XML 99

    A simple CSS stylesheet for XML 101

    Dissecting a simple CSS stylesheet 102

    Linking CSS and XML 106

    Adding CSS to XSLT 107

    Part III: Building In Validation with DTDs and Schemas 109

    Chapter 8: Understanding and Using DTDs 111

    What's a DTD? 112

    When to use a DTD 113

    When NOT to use a DTD 113

    Inspecting the XML Prolog 114

    Examining the XML declaration 115

    Discovering the DOCTYPE 116

    Understanding comments 116

    Processing instructions 117

    How about that white space? 117

    Reading a DTD 118

    Using Element Declarations 119

    Using the EMPTY element type and the ANY element type 120

    Adding mixed content 121

    Using element content models 122

    Declaring Attributes 123

    Discovering Entities 125

    General entities 126

    Parameter entities 128

    Understanding Notations 130

    Calling a DTD 131

    Internal DTDs 131

    External DTDs 132

    When to use an internal or external DTD 133

    Chapter 9: Understanding and Using XML Schema 135

    What's an XML Schema? 136

    So Many Datatypes, So Little Time 138

    XML Prolog 139

    Document Structures 141

    Element declarations 141

    Attribute declarations 144

    Attribute groups 144

    What about that white space? 145

    Datatype Declarations 148

    Simple datatypes 148

    Complex datatypes 149

    Defining constraints and value checks 149

    Dealing with Entities, Notations, and More 150

    Annotations 151

    Deciding When to Use a Schema 152

    Referencing XML Schema Documents 153

    The inside view: Referencing a schema in an XML document 153

    Calling for outside support: Referencing external schemas in your schema 153

    Double-Checking Your Schemas and Documents 155

    Chapter 10: Building a Custom XML Schema 157

    Doing the Validity Rag 157

    Step 1: Understanding Your Data 159

    Step 2: Being the Root of All Structure: Elements 159

    Step 3: Building Content Models 161

    Step 4: Using Attributes to Shed Light on Data Structure 163

    Step 5: Using Datatype Declarations to Define What's What 164

    Tricks of the Trade 167

    Creating a Simple Schema 168

    Using a Schema with an XML File in Word 2003 170

    Chapter 11: Modifying an Existing Schema 173

    Trading Control for Flexibility 174

    Eliciting Markup from an XML Schema 174

    Modifying a Schema 176

    Using Datatypes Effectively 177

    Using datatypes with data-intensive content 177

    Using datatypes with text-intensive content 179

    Making Elements Work Wisely and Well 180

    Creating crafty content models 180

    A matter of selection 181

    Mixing up the order 183

    Using Complex Datatypes 183

    When XML Schemas Collide: Namespaces 185

    Including External Data 188

    Including/Excluding Document Content 188

    Converting DTDs to Schemas 190

    Part IV: Transforming and Processing XML 195

    Chapter 12: Handling Transformations with XSL 197

    The Two Faces of XSL 198

    Xslt 198

    Xsl-fo 200

    XSL Stylesheets Are XML Documents 201

    A Simple Transformation Using XSLT 202

    An XSLT Stylesheet for Converting XML to HTML 202

    The pieces of the stylesheet puzzle 205

    Processing element content 207

    Dealing with repeating elements 209

    Creating an XSLT Stylesheet with XSLT Editors 210

    Chapter 13: The XML Path Language 215

    Why Do You Need Directions? 216

    XPath document trees 217

    Understanding XPath nodes 218

    XPath Directions and Destinations 220

    XPath Syntax 221

    Some simple location paths 222

    Adding expressions 223

    Taking steps along the XPath 223

    Looking at attributes 224

    Going backward 224

    Reversing direction 225

    Null results 225

    Getting back to your roots 226

    XPath functions 226

    Using XPath with XMLSpy 226

    The Short Version 228

    Child-axis abbreviations 229

    Attribute-axis abbreviation 229

    Predicate and expression abbreviations 229

    Some more abbreviations 230

    What's New in XPath 2.0? 231

    Where to Now? 233

    Chapter 14: Processing XML 235

    Frankly, My Dear, I Don't Give a DOM 235

    Keeping in touch with the family 238

    Understanding DOM structure 238

    What Goes In Must Come Out: Processing XML 240

    So many processors, so little time 242

    Which processor is right for you? 243

    Part V: XML Application Development 245

    Chapter 15: Using XML with Web Services 247

    What's Up with Web Services? 248

    A Web Services Architecture 251

    Transport: Moving XML messages 252

    Packaging/Extensions: Managing information exchange 253

    Description: Specifying services and related components 254

    Discovery: Finding what's available 255

    Where Will Web Services Lead? 256

    Chapter 16: XML and Forms 259

    Collecting Information with Forms: The Basics 260

    HTML Forms 260

    XML Forms 261

    XForms 261

    InfoPath 267

    Chapter 17: Serving Up the Data: XML and Databases 271

    Using Databases with XML 272

    Text-intensive XML 272

    Data-intensive XML 273

    Creating XML from Database Files 273

    Using Word 2003 274

    Using InfoPath 275

    Using XMLSpy 278

    Using XML with Access 2003 281

    Chapter 18: XML and RSS 285

    Introducing RSS 286

    Sorting Out the Versions 286

    RSS 0.9x 287

    Rss 2.0/2.01 290

    Rss 1.0 291

    Validating an RSS Feed 295

    Creating RSS Feeds 296

    Get Syndicated! 297

    Using an RSS Reader 298

    Part VI: The Part of Tens 299

    Chapter 19: XML Tools and Technologies 301

    Creating Documents with Authoring Tools 301

    Epic Editor 302

    Turbo XML v2.4.1 303

    XMetaL Author 4.5 303

    XML Pro v2.0.1 303

    XML Spy 2005 304

    Checking Documents with Parser Tools 304

    Ælfred 305

    expat 306

    Lark 306

    Viewing with XML Browsers 307

    Amaya 307

    Internet Explorer 6 307

    Mozilla 308

    Firefox 1.0 308

    Opera 308

    Using XML Parsers and Engines 309

    XML C Library for Gnome 309

    Java XML Pack 310

    Xerces 310

    Employing Conversion Tools 311

    HTML Tidy 311

    Extensible Programming Script (XPS) 311

    The Ultimate XML Grab Bag and Goodie Box 312

    Microsoft does XML, too! 312

    webMethods automates XML excellence 312

    Chapter 20: Ten Top XML Applications 313

    Xhtml = Xml + Html 314

    XML Style Is a Matter of Application 314

    Wireless Markup Language (WML) 314

    DocBook, Anyone? 315

    Mathematical Markup Language (MathML) 315

    Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) 316

    Resource Description Framework (RDF) 316

    Synchronized Multimedia Integration Language (SMIL) 317

    Servin' Up Web Services 317

    XQuery 318

    Create XML Applications with Zope 319

    Chapter 21: Ten Ultimate XML Resources 321

    XML's Many and Marvelous Specs 321

    An XML Nonpareil 322

    XML in the Mail 323

    Excellent XML Examples at zvon.org 323

    XML News and Information 323

    XML Training Options 324

    Building a Bodacious XML Bookshelf 325

    Studying XML for Certification 326

    Serious Searches Lead to Success 327

    Glossary 329

    Index 347