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XML in a Nutshell, Third Edition
XML in a Nutshell, Third Edition
ISBN: 0596007647
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 232
Authors:
Elliotte Rusty Harold
,
W. Scott Means
BUY ON AMAZON
XML in a Nutshell, 3rd Edition
Table of Contents
Copyright
Preface
What This Book Covers
What s New in the Third Edition
Organization of the Book
Conventions Used in This Book
Request for Comments
Acknowledgments
Part I: XML Concepts
Chapter 1. Introducing XML
1.1 The Benefits of XML
1.2 What XML Is Not
1.3 Portable Data
1.4 How XML Works
1.5 The Evolution of XML
Chapter 2. XML Fundamentals
2.1 XML Documents and XML Files
2.2 Elements, Tags, and Character Data
2.3 Attributes
2.4 XML Names
2.5 References
2.6 CDATA Sections
2.7 Comments
2.8 Processing Instructions
2.9 The XML Declaration
2.10 Checking Documents for Well-Formedness
Chapter 3. Document Type Definitions (DTDs)
3.1 Validation
3.2 Element Declarations
3.3 Attribute Declarations
3.4 General Entity Declarations
3.5 External Parsed General Entities
3.6 External Unparsed Entities and Notations
3.7 Parameter Entities
3.8 Conditional Inclusion
3.9 Two DTD Examples
3.10 Locating Standard DTDs
Chapter 4. Namespaces
4.1 The Need for Namespaces
4.2 Namespace Syntax
4.3 How Parsers Handle Namespaces
4.4 Namespaces and DTDs
Chapter 5. Internationalization
5.1 Character-Set Metadata
5.2 The Encoding Declaration
5.3 Text Declarations
5.4 XML-Defined Character Sets
5.5 Unicode
5.6 ISO Character Sets
5.7 Platform-Dependent Character Sets
5.8 Converting Between Character Sets
5.9 The Default Character Set for XML Documents
5.10 Character References
5.11 xml:lang
Part II: Narrative-Like Documents
Chapter 6. XML as a Document Format
6.1 SGML s Legacy
6.2 Narrative Document Structures
6.3 TEI
6.4 DocBook
6.5 OpenOffice
6.6 WordprocessingML
6.7 Document Permanence
6.8 Transformation and Presentation
Chapter 7. XML on the Web
7.1 XHTML
7.2 Direct Display of XML in Browsers
7.3 Authoring Compound Documents with Modular XHTML
7.4 Prospects for Improved Web Search Methods
Chapter 8. XSL Transformations (XSLT)
8.1 An Example Input Document
8.2 xsl:stylesheet and xsl:transform
8.3 Stylesheet Processors
8.4 Templates and Template Rules
8.5 Calculating the Value of an Element with xsl:value-of
8.6 Applying Templates with xsl:apply-templates
8.7 The Built-in Template Rules
8.8 Modes
8.9 Attribute Value Templates
8.10 XSLT and Namespaces
8.11 Other XSLT Elements
Chapter 9. XPath
9.1 The Tree Structure of an XML Document
9.2 Location Paths
9.3 Compound Location Paths
9.4 Predicates
9.5 Unabbreviated Location Paths
9.6 General XPath Expressions
9.7 XPath Functions
Chapter 10. XLinks
10.1 Simple Links
10.2 Link Behavior
10.3 Link Semantics
10.4 Extended Links
10.5 Linkbases
10.6 DTDs for XLinks
10.7 Base URIs
Chapter 11. XPointers
11.1 XPointers on URLs
11.2 XPointers in Links
11.3 Shorthand Pointers
11.4 Child Sequences
11.5 Namespaces
11.6 Points
11.7 Ranges
Chapter 12. XInclude
12.1 The include Element
12.2 Including Text Files
12.3 Content Negotiation
12.4 Fallbacks
12.5 XPointers
Chapter 13. Cascading Style Sheets (CSS)
13.1 The Levels of CSS
13.2 CSS Syntax
13.3 Associating Stylesheets with XML Documents
13.4 Selectors
13.5 The Display Property
13.6 Pixels, Points, Picas, and Other Units of Length
13.7 Font Properties
13.8 Text Properties
13.9 Colors
Chapter 14. XSL Formatting Objects (XSL-FO)
14.1 XSL Formatting Objects
14.2 The Structure of an XSL-FO Document
14.3 Laying Out the Master Pages
14.4 XSL-FO Properties
14.5 Choosing Between CSS and XSL-FO
Chapter 15. Resource Directory Description Language (RDDL)
15.1 What s at the End of a Namespace URL?
15.2 RDDL Syntax
15.3 Natures
15.4 Purposes
Part III: Record-Like Documents
Chapter 16. XML as a Data Format
16.1 Why Use XML for Data?
16.2 Developing Record-Like XML Formats
16.3 Sharing Your XML Format
Chapter 17. XML Schemas
17.1 Overview
17.2 Schema Basics
17.3 Working with Namespaces
17.4 Complex Types
17.5 Empty Elements
17.6 Simple Content
17.7 Mixed Content
17.8 Allowing Any Content
17.9 Controlling Type Derivation
Chapter 18. Programming Models
18.1 Common XML Processing Models
18.2 Common XML Processing Issues
18.3 Generating XML Documents
Chapter 19. Document Object Model (DOM)
19.1 DOM Foundations
19.2 Structure of the DOM Core
19.3 Node and Other Generic Interfaces
19.4 Specific Node-Type Interfaces
19.5 The DOMImplementation Interface
19.6 DOM Level 3 Interfaces
19.7 Parsing a Document with DOM
19.8 A Simple DOM Application
Chapter 20. Simple API for XML (SAX)
20.1 The ContentHandler Interface
20.2 Features and Properties
20.3 Filters
Part IV: Reference
Chapter 21. XML Reference
21.1 How to Use This Reference
21.2 Annotated Sample Documents
21.3 XML Syntax
21.4 Constraints
21.5 XML 1.0 Document Grammar
21.6 XML 1.1 Document Grammar
Chapter 22. Schemas Reference
22.1 The Schema Namespaces
22.2 Schema Elements
22.3 Built-in Types
22.4 Instance Document Attributes
Chapter 23. XPath Reference
23.1 The XPath Data Model
23.2 Data Types
23.3 Location Paths
23.4 Predicates
23.5 XPath Functions
Chapter 24. XSLT Reference
24.1 The XSLT Namespace
24.2 XSLT Elements
24.3 XSLT Functions
24.4 TrAX
Chapter 25. DOM Reference
25.1 Object Hierarchy
25.2 Object Reference
Chapter 26. SAX Reference
26.1 The org.xml.sax Package
26.2 The org.xml.sax.helpers Package
26.3 SAX Features and Properties
26.4 The org.xml.sax.ext Package
Chapter 27. Character Sets
27.1 Character Tables
27.2 HTML4 Entity Sets
27.3 Other Unicode Blocks
Colophon
Index
index_SYMBOL
index_A
index_B
index_C
index_D
index_E
index_F
index_G
index_H
index_I
index_J
index_K
index_L
index_M
index_N
index_O
index_P
index_Q
index_R
index_S
index_T
index_U
index_V
index_W
index_X
index_Y
XML in a Nutshell, Third Edition
ISBN: 0596007647
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 232
Authors:
Elliotte Rusty Harold
,
W. Scott Means
BUY ON AMAZON
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Discovering Devices
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Quality: Professional Views
Software Process Maturity Assessment and Software Project Assessment
Software Process Assessment Cycle
Measuring Levels Is Not Enough
Software Quality Engineering Modeling
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The Java Onion
Arrays And Vectors
Database Access
Appendix B Mixing RPG And Java
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Conclusion
Conclusion
Binding-Related Extensions to Host Items and Host Controls
Editing Manifests
How a COM Add-In Is Registered
Comparing, Designing, and Deploying VPNs
Review Questions
Implementing Advanced AToM Features
MPLS Layer 3 VPNs Overview
Review Questions
Summary
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Overview of the Oracle RDBMS
The Oracle Network Architecture
Oracle and PL/SQL
Triggers
Attacking Oracle PL/SQL Web Applications
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