Similar Articles |
|
JavaWorld September 2000 Andre Tost |
XML document processing in Java using XPath and XSLT The XSLT and XPath standards provide a way of handling certain problems that is more elegant and efficient than simply using the DOM API. In fact, using DOM, XSLT, and XPath together, applying each to different problems, will lead to the best code... |
JavaWorld December 2001 Taylor Cowan |
XSLT blooms with Java XSLT (Extensible Stylesheet Language Transformation) offers an excellent vehicle for styling XML documents as HTML. However, it shows some weakness when the transformation requires extensive logic. When XSLT languages fail to complete the job, you can extend your stylesheets with Java classes and take advantage of both languages' features. This article demonstrates how to extend XSLT with Java. You will learn how to instantiate and invoke methods on Java objects from within an XSLT stylesheet. The article also demonstrates how XML nodes are passed to Java classes and returned back to the stylesheet for further processing. |
Linux Journal February 1, 2007 Ben Martin |
Virtual Filesystems Are Virtual Office Documents Use libferris, XML and XSLT to create virtual filesystems and virtual documents. |
Linux Journal March 1, 2002 Cameron Laird |
XSLT Powers a New Wave of Web Applications Extensible Stylesheet Language for Transformations (XSLT) is a computing language specialized for mapping XML documents into other XML documents... |
JavaWorld November 2000 Lanette Poe & Michael Ball |
DSML gives you the power to access your LDAP information as XML These days, directory services and XML form the backbone of good data management. With Directory Service Markup Language (DSML) -- a new standard for representing directory information as XML -- directory services can take advantage of XML's most powerful features... |
JavaWorld February 2002 Julien Mercay & Gilbert Bouzeid |
Boost Struts with XSLT and XML Struts is an innovative server-side Java framework designed to build Web applications. This article introduces the processing model underlying Struts, describes the Struts framework itself, and presents Model 2X, which enhances Struts... |
JavaWorld September 2002 Joe Walker |
XML glossary With XML evolving at a rapid pace, many developers get lost in a sea of acronyms. This article defines many XML technologies crucial to Java developers |
JavaWorld February 2002 Victor Okunev |
Generate JavaBean classes dynamically with XSLT For some projects, you need a more flexible business object structure. This article lays a foundation for a simple framework to build truly adaptive systems, saving you hours of routine programming... |
JavaWorld November 2000 Kevin Unger |
Solve your servlet-based presentation problems Should you use raw servlets, JSP pages, servlets with a templating engine, an automatic HTML-to-Java compiler, or XSL stylesheets to implement content presentation in your next thin-client application? This article surveys the various techniques and helps you make the best decision... |
Macworld October 2000 Lisa Schmeiser |
Inside XML Will These Three Letters Change the Web Forever? Don't let what you don't know frighten you. XML promises to make Web publishing as simple as an elementary-school grammar lesson. And Macworld's in-depth XML tutorial will show you what it's all about. |
New Architect November 2002 Kurt Cagle |
eXcelon Stylus Studio 4.0 Today, eXcelon Stylus Studio has gone from being a promising concept to a superb, mature editor for XSLT. It has also extended its capability to other languages, including XML Schema Definition language (XSD) and Java servlets. |
Linux Journal April 1, 2007 Chad Files |
Use Inkscape and XSLT to Create Cross-Platform Reports and Forms A way to create platform-independent dynamic forms and reports. |
Linux Journal September 30, 2006 David Lynch |
Simple Web Sites Using DocBook XML and CSS An embedded software developer explains how to build simple content Web sites using DocBook XML and CSS. |
JavaWorld October 2000 Michael Koch |
Leverage legacy systems with a blend of XML, XSL, and Java As e-commerce becomes a focal point for companies scrambling to have a presence on the electronic frontier, incorporating those new ventures into the existing infrastructure becomes crucial. A few creative applications using XML and Java can give you a good solution... |
JavaWorld February 2003 Steve Small |
JSP Standard Tag Library eases Webpage development The release of JavaServer Pages Standard Tag Library is a significant development for JSP/servlet developers. With an expression language and a set of four powerful, easy-to-learn standard tag libraries, JSTL is likely to soon become the dominant approach for implementing dynamic, Java-based Websites. |
JavaWorld November 2000 Brett McLaughlin |
Validation with Java and XML schema, Part 3 Taking validation beyond simple if-then-else structures, XML schemas can provide a better way to validate data in Java applications. You'll learn to parse the XML schema, build up Java representations of the schema's constraints, and apply those constraints to an application's data... |
New Architect October 2002 Paul Sholtz |
Tame the Information Tangle A new breed of document storage and management systems has appeared that's been specially optimized for publishing XML documents on the Web. A look at native XML databases and XML-enabled databases. |
JavaWorld May 2002 |
A J2EE presentation pattern: Applets with servlets and XML Sometimes a standard HTML view on your J2EE-based system doesn't offer a sophisticated enough user interface. Based on the pattern described here, you can enhance such a Web interface with the Java Plug-in. The Java Plug-in lets you embed applets that consume XML documents and display the contained data in a particular way. These XML documents contain presentation data derived from servlets looking at your business logic tier. This lets your users access powerful UI components while still retaining a strong decoupling between the business logic and presentation tiers---without complicated firewall issues. |
InternetNews November 3, 2005 Clint Boulton |
W3C Ratifies Key XML Specs The World Wide Web consortium had a landmark day for XML development, recommending XSLT 2.0 and XML XQuery 1.0 as standards for transforming and querying XML. |
JavaWorld July 2000 Mark Johnson |
Programming XML in Java, Part 3 An in-depth look at the Document Object Model (DOM), the most common alternative XML-processing mechanism. See how you can use DOM to manipulate the source code data in an illustrative example program... |
Bio-IT World May 19, 2004 Smietana & Lou |
Better Lab Workflow with XML Many bottlenecks could be avoided if informatics data systems provided mechanisms for installing these device drivers so that new instruments could be seamlessly integrated into laboratory workflow. |
JavaWorld October 2001 Michael Ball |
Dispatcher eases workflow implementation This article explains how to use an Extensible Stylesheet Language (XSL)-based application employing the Dispatcher design pattern to create simple workflows and a reusable API... |
JavaWorld May 2000 Bill Venners |
Objects versus documents for server-client interaction, Part 1 Bill Venners compares the traditional approach to client-server interaction, using protocols and documents, with Jini's approach of using objects and interfaces.... |
JavaWorld August 2000 Robert Hustead |
Mapping XML to Java, Part 1 The SAX API is superior to the DOM API in many aspects of runtime performance. In this article we will explore using SAX to map XML data to Java. Because using SAX is not as intuitive as using DOM, we will also spend some time familiarizing ourselves with coding to SAX. |
JavaWorld October 2000 Brett McLaughlin |
Validation with Java and XML Schema, Part 2 A roadmap for taking Java method parameters and validating them against constraints in an XML document. Various approaches will be examined, and you will begin to actually code the utilities for converting those XML constraints into usable Java utilities... |
Bio-IT World July 2005 Chris Dagdigian |
Adventures in XML Transformation The combination of XPATH and XSLT revived the Grid Engine monitoring project and enabled it to make significant progress in a few short weeks of nights-and-weekends hacking. |
PC Magazine December 28, 2004 Richard V. Dragan |
Ease into XML with Microsoft Word 2003 Office 2003 is XML-aware, and Word is a good place to get your feet wet. |
InternetNews January 24, 2007 Clint Boulton |
Key XML Standards Pass W3C Muster The World Wide Web Consortium today confirmed the fitness of several XML standards designed to query, transform and access XML data and documents. |
JavaWorld May 2002 Leon Messerschmidt |
Take the sting out of SAX Although SAX (the Simple API for XML) parsers are handy tools for parsing XML content, developing and maintaining a SAX parser can prove difficult. This article shows you how to use the information contained in XML Schemas to generate source code for a skeleton SAX parser... |
JavaWorld October 2002 Ray Djajadinata |
Yes, you can secure your Web services documents, Part 2 Introduction to XML Digital Signature, a standard that handles a document's integrity, including how to write XML Signature code using an implementation currently available: IBM XML Security Suite. |
JavaWorld March 2001 Tarak Modi |
Clean up your wire protocol with SOAP, Part 1 SOAP is not just another buzzword. It is a powerful new application of vendor-agnostic technologies, such as XML, that can help take the world of distributed programming to new heights. This article, the first in a series of four, introduces you to the basics of SOAP... |
D-Lib May 2003 Priscilla Caplan |
XML in Libraries Reading XML in Libraries, edited by Roy Tennant, gave me once again a powerful sense of the vigor and creativity with which we seize upon new technologies. The book features a baker's dozen of short case studies describing various library-related applications using XML in some way. |
JavaWorld October 2000 Rinaldo Di Giorgio |
Serve clients' specific protocol requirements with Brazil, Part 2 How to use XML to facilitate data exchange between applications.... How you apply XML to exchange weather data... Scripting languages that you can implement to efficiently and quickly produce XML-tagged data... etc. |
D-Lib November 2004 Canos et al. |
A Service-Oriented Framework for Bibliography Management The continuous growth of information sources and the subsequent increase in the size of collections has made bibliography management one of the most frustrating tasks researchers face. Bibshare exploits the power of Web services to provide a framework for bibliography management. |
New Architect October 2002 Kurt Cagle |
When Good Servers Meet Bad Clients A review of Coherity XML Database (CXD) 3.0: strong server technology, but weak documentation and poor user interface. |
Linux Journal January 1, 2007 Ben Martin |
Ajax Timelines and the Semantic Web Explore anything that has a time component with a little Timeline Ajax code. |
D-Lib February 2005 |
The eXtensible Past: The Relevance of the XML Data Format for Access to Historical Datasets and a Strategy for Digital Preservation Reports on investigations carried out by the Netherlands Historical Data Archive into the relevance of the XML data format and the "Open Archives" paradigm on the long-term preservation and dissemination of historical datasets. |
CIO October 1, 2001 Christopher Lindquist |
Company to Watch: NeoCore XML's adherents use many glowing adjectives to describe their favorite acronym, but fast isn't usually one of them. Now a small company in Colorado Springs, Colo., hopes to make speed and XML synonymous... |
JavaWorld August 2002 Ray Djajadinata |
Yes, you can secure your Web services documents, Part 1 This article discusses XML Encryption, an important technology in the Web services security realm. The article explains what it is, why savvy Java programmers should understand it, and how to implement the technology using IBM's XML Security Suite. |
JavaWorld December 2001 |
Sun adds Web services to J2EE The Java XML Pack adds capability for XML messaging and data binding, as well as remote procedure calls using SOAP (Simple Object Access Protocol). |
Insurance & Technology February 7, 2004 Greg MacSweeney |
Employee Benefits Deal To better serve the employee benefits marketplace, Applied Systems is teaming with BenefitPoint to give agents using Applied Systems applications the ability to service benefits packages directly from their agency management systems. |
CIO May 15, 2001 Scott Berinato |
The Hype Stuff Will XML be the ultimate platform? Or will it be the next EDI? |
PC Magazine August 2, 2006 John Brandon |
Get to Know Excel Templates Making sense of data is both the purpose of Microsoft Excel and its challenge. |
InternetNews December 20, 2004 Clint Boulton |
New W3C Standard Reuses Content The Web standards body reaches another goal in its bid to construct composite XML documents reusing information. |
InternetNews April 22, 2004 Ryan Naraine |
XML Encryption Added to Apache Project The Apache Foundation's XML Security Project takes another step towards full implementation of security standards in the markup language. |
InternetNews May 14, 2010 |
W3C Issues XProc XML Pipeline Standard World Wide Web Consortium issues long-awaited XML pipeline standard dubbed XProc to enable interoperability across multiple XML documents. |
JavaWorld January 2002 Frank Sommers |
A birds-eye view of Web services The author defines Web services, explains how they operate, and compares them to related Java technologies. He also presents a general programming model for Web services, independent of any framework or technology... |
CIO July 1, 2001 Tim Bray |
XML: Three Letters Every CIO Should Know In a world ruled by data, it's time for a tool that protects you from the future... |
Linux Journal August 2000 Daniel Lazenby |
Book Review Open Source Linux: Web Programming by Christopher A. Jones and Drew Batchelor... By the time you reach the end of this book, you will have explored conceptual constructs, models and tools you can use to develop web sites |
JavaWorld February 2001 Eoin Lane |
Add XML to your J2EE applications The author proposes an open source replacement for the J2EE presentation layer by building an XML-aware application server with a fully operational end-to-end solution. The solution consists of an application server based on open source technologies from Apache, jBoss, and the W3C... |