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Programmer To Programmer: Beginning XML

Learn About Extensible Markup Language (XML) - What It Is, How It Works And How To Use It In Your Data Exchange Applications - For The Web, E-Commerce And More!

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XML is the latest buzzword on the Internet. It's a rapidly maturing technology with powerful real-world applications, particularly for the management, display and organization of data. Together with its display language (XSL) and the standardized Document Object Model, it is essential technology for anyone looking for more efficient and cost effective ways of both managing and transfering data. Perhaps the most well known applications are web related (especially with the latest developments in handheld web access - for which the technology is XML-based). But there are many other non-web based applications where XML is useful - for example as a replacement for (or to complement) traditional databases or for the transfer of financial information between businesses.

Compra de libros

Programmer To Programmer: Beginning XML, David Hunter, Kurt Cagle, Dave Gibbons, Nikola Ozu, Jonathan Pinnock, Paul Spencer

Idioma
Publicado en
2000
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(Tapa blanda),
Estado del libro
Bueno
Precio
6,49 €

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Título
Programmer To Programmer: Beginning XML
Subtítulo
Learn About Extensible Markup Language (XML) - What It Is, How It Works And How To Use It In Your Data Exchange Applications - For The Web, E-Commerce And More!
Idioma
Inglés
Editorial
Apress
Publicado en
2000
Formato
Tapa blanda
Páginas
823
ISBN10
1861003412
ISBN13
9781861003416
Serie
Descripción
XML is the latest buzzword on the Internet. It's a rapidly maturing technology with powerful real-world applications, particularly for the management, display and organization of data. Together with its display language (XSL) and the standardized Document Object Model, it is essential technology for anyone looking for more efficient and cost effective ways of both managing and transfering data. Perhaps the most well known applications are web related (especially with the latest developments in handheld web access - for which the technology is XML-based). But there are many other non-web based applications where XML is useful - for example as a replacement for (or to complement) traditional databases or for the transfer of financial information between businesses.