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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 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 May 2000 Jason Hunter & Brett McLaughlin |
Easy Java/XML integration with JDOM, Part 1 JDOM is an open source API designed to represent an XML document and its contents to the typical Java developer in an intuitive and straightforward way.... |
JavaWorld October 2000 Robert Hustead |
Mapping XML to Java, Part 2 This article develops a SAX API-based class library that is easily extended to create XML-to-Java mapping code. First, we explore the important ideas that drive the need for the class library. Then we develop a basic approach for implementing the library as well as a few samples that demonstrate some more advanced topics on parsing XML with the SAX API... |
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 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... |
JavaWorld July 2000 Jason Hunter & Brett McLaughlin |
Easy Java/XML integration with JDOM, Part 2 JDOM is a new API for reading, writing, and manipulating XML from within Java code. In Part 1 of this series, Hunter and McLaughlin explained how to use JDOM to read XML from an existing source. In this final part, they focus on how you can use JDOM to create and mutate XML. |
JavaWorld April 2002 |
XML documents on the run, Part 3 This final article of a three-part XML document series looks at two pull parsers based on the new Common API for XML Pull Parsing (XMLPull), then wraps up with an XML parser performance showdown. Will the pull challengers defeat the reigning SAX2 champions? |
InternetNews April 8, 2004 Sean Michael Kerner |
W3C Advances Specs For Web Interoperability DOM Level 3 specifications are now official W3C recommendations for developers to enable components across all browsers, servers and platforms. |
PC Magazine April 20, 2004 Sheryl Canter |
Understanding Client-Side Scripting Make your Web pages more dynamic without overburdening your server. |
JavaWorld May 2001 Markus Dorn |
Reading objects is easy with SAX By following some simple rules when mapping objects to XML, you can easily read object structures, even complex ones, from XML. See how you can use SAX to eliminate that complexity... |
JavaWorld October 2002 Erik Swenson |
Simplify XML file processing with the Jakarta Commons Digester The Jakarta Commons Digester is a popular open source utility that facilitates XML file processing. This article provides an overview of Digester, followed by an example that uses Digester to parse an XML configuration file. |
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 |
Linux Journal April 1, 2007 Kamran Husain |
Extract and Parse ODF Files with Python This article highlights the basic structure of ODF files, some internals of the underlying XML files and shows how to use Python to read the contents to perform a simple search for keywords. |
JavaWorld March 2001 Andy Krumel |
Jato: The new kid on the open source block The Jato API converts XML documents into Java objects and back again. In January, Andy Krumel publicly released the API in beta form at SourceForge. Based on the observation that transformations are mechanical and tedious, with Jato a simple XML script describes the XML/Java mapping. |
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. |
JavaWorld December 2000 Peter Sayer |
XML for Java gains new support with Sun API enhancements Sun Microsystems published details on Monday of two new interfaces to link its Java programming language to XML... |
JavaWorld September 2000 Todd Sundsted |
Alternative deployment methods, Part 3: The code In Part 3 of his series on application deployment, Todd Sundsted looks at the code that supports the deployment tool he described in Part 2. This article explains the framework's operation, highlights its design features, and explores the challenges of building this type of application. |
JavaWorld June 2000 |
Letters to the Editor (June 23, 2000) Jason Hunter addresses a gripe with calling instanceof when using JDOM; Mark Johnson responds to feedback on his XML series; reader challenges Tony Sintes about whether it truly is impossible to write a swap method... |
JavaWorld August 2000 Mark Pollack |
Code generation using Javadoc This article presents a custom doclet that provides a simple extensible architecture to generate code for SQL schema, and Java and C++ classes from simple Java class definitions. |
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 January 2002 Jason Cai |
Combine the Session Facade pattern with XML This article explores the benefits and advantages of using the Session Facade pattern. The author discusses when to use the pattern with value objects, and when to use it with XML. He also provides a detailed implementation of the Session Facade pattern integrated with XML... |
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 January 2002 Yuan & Long |
Build database-powered mobile applications on the Java platform This article explains how to create mobile database applications using the Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition/Mobile Information Device Profile (J2ME/MIDP) and the Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE). The authors introduce an architecture that uses JavaServer Pages (JSPs) as middleware between a MIDP frontend and a database backend. They also explain specific design decisions and implementation issues, such as persistent storage, network connection, session management, and data communication. Their discussion focuses on the integration between the client and server-side Java applications. |
JavaWorld June 2001 Michael Daconta |
An API's looks can be deceiving When you examine an API, your first impressions are often wrong. The author examines two cases where an intuitive model of how an API should work trips over the complexity of implementation details... |
JavaWorld January 2001 Stanley Santiago |
Combine the power of XPath and JSP tag libraries In this article, we'll examine the XPath custom tag library for JSPs and see a tag collection that provides simple control constructs and a uniform attribute value substitution facility, all of which combine to reduce complexity and improve functionality... |
JavaWorld June 2000 Michael Ball |
XSL gives your XML some style Separating content from presentation is one of XML's major features. But eventually you need to style that XML into something presentable. That's where XSL (Extensible Stylesheet Language) comes in -- XSL transforms XML from one document type to another. Servlets provide a great platform for doing those translations. In this article you'll learn how to transform XML into HTML, using servlets. |
JavaWorld February 2002 Dennis M. Sosnoski |
XML documents on the run, Part 1 Event-driven XML document processing with SAX (Simple API for XML) and SAX2 can greatly improve performance and can avoid document size limits associated with in-memory representations such as DOM (Document Object Model) or JDOM... |
JavaWorld December 2001 Sam Brodkin |
Use XML data binding to do your laundry This article walks you through two frameworks for generating Java classes automatically from XML data constraints: Sun's Java Architecture for XML Binding (JAXB) and Castor from the Exolab Group... |
JavaWorld March 2001 Vinay Aggarwal |
The magic of Merlin This technical overview will give you insight into the various new features and APIs of the upcoming JDK 1.4 -- code-named Merlin -- expected to be released this month. |
JavaWorld July 2000 Bill Venners |
Objects versus documents for server-client interaction, Part 2 In this three-part series, Bill Venners compares the traditional approach to defining client/server interaction, using protocols and documents, with Jini's strategy of using objects and interfaces. |
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... |
JavaWorld August 2001 Ray Djajadinata |
Sir, what is your preference? J2SE 1.4 offers a number of new APIs to make your Java development life easier. This article discusses one of those APIs: Preferences. It explains how Preferences solves typical problems in managing our applications' preferences, while still being simple and easy to use. |
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. |
JavaWorld October 3, 2003 Allen Holub |
Create client-side user interfaces in HTML This article presents a variant on Swing's JEditorPane that makes it possible to specify an entire screen of your client-side user interface (UI) in HTML. |
JavaWorld February 2001 Wally Flint |
Plant your data in a ternary search tree The ternary search tree (TST) provides a fast and flexible approach to storing data. This article shows you how to use the TST with Java to build an English dictionary that matches words and checks spelling, and how to use a TST to construct a database and an array that can assume any size or dimension on the fly. |
Linux Journal May 1, 2007 Nicholas Petreley |
Ajax Simplified Ajax can become complex as far as implementation, but the concept is quite simple. Here are the key steps involved that exploit the power of Ajax. |
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... |
JavaWorld November 2002 B.J. Fesq |
Sun boosts enterprise Java This article provides a clear understanding of the enterprise Java platform's direction and introduces J2EE (Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition) 1.4's support for emerging Web services standards. |
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... |
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. |
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. |
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 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. |
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. |
JavaWorld June 2002 Michael Juntao Yuan & Ju Long |
Java readies itself for wireless Web services The future world of pervasive computing demands powerful and flexible development platforms. Is Java up to the task? Can Java provide end-to-end solutions for wireless Web services networks? The authors discuss the definition, importance, and architecture of wireless Web services. |
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 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.... |
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. |
New Architect June 2002 Steven Champeon |
Why DHTML Will Win Competition among user interface tools heats up... |