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By Tony Gupta  Here is my 'five-minute XML' series where by I give you scheduled byte size guides.
Today's issue is good for those people that happen to be starting out with XML.
In "XML Schema - Overview" (5 Minute XML #7), I reported the need for a schema definition language. I defined principle ... Sep. 21, 2011 07:15 AM EDT Reads: 1,829 | By Pat Romanski  M86 Security, a leading global provider of Web and messaging security products, released Predictions 2010, a report on its expectations for Web and messaging-based threats for the coming year. The report is based on M86 Security Lab’s extensive research into the current trends in threa... Dec. 3, 2009 05:00 PM EST Reads: 6,054 | By Adam Kolawa  Since its inception XML has at times been seen as the cure-all for every problem related to Web applications and integration projects. However, poorly written XML can either slow down an integration project, or worse, cause the integration project to collapse. Oct. 23, 2005 05:00 PM EDT Reads: 27,419 | By Deepak Vohra; Ajay Vohra This article compares Document Type Definition (DTD) and XML Schema elements. Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) developers use DTDs and schemas in J2EE/XML applications. When a DTD for an XML document is provided and validation with an XML Schema is required, the DTD-to-XML Schema conve... Mar. 10, 2004 12:00 AM EST Reads: 25,745 | By Adam Kolawa Garbage in, garbage out - it's an axiom that applies to many aspects of enterprise development, but none more so than building reliable and robust Web applications and integration projects with XML. Since its inception, XML has been seen as the cure-all for every problem related to Web... Mar. 10, 2004 12:00 AM EST Reads: 33,157 | By Doug Kaye  Most non-programmers think of transactions as associated with buying and selling, credit-card authorizations, and the like. But in the jargon of computer science, the word transaction has a very specific meaning: the interaction and managed outcome of a well-defined set of tasks. Feb. 20, 2004 12:00 AM EST Reads: 25,170 | By Craig Berry One of the things I enjoy most about working with XML and its related technologies is that there is always more to learn. I have been using XML for three years, but not a week goes by that I'm not pleasantly surprised to find something new I can do with it - or, even better, to find an... Feb. 20, 2004 12:00 AM EST Reads: 13,152 | By Suresh Selvaraj This article will give you enough information to use the major features of XSL Formatting Objects (XSL-FO) in conjunction with Apache's FOP API for rendering documents in Adobe's Portable Document Format (PDF). Sep. 6, 2002 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 19,899 Replies: 1 | By Steve Hoenisch Complex technical documentation presented on the Internet calls for user interfaces or navigational options that empower readers to quickly gain access to the information that suits their needs. If your readers are viewing documents in an Internet Explorer-only environment, you can let... Jun. 20, 2002 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 10,600 | By Joseph Moeller We developed a 'patent mining' tool for our company utilizing XML. Corporate leaders wanted to provide company-wide browser access to our corporate patent portfolio as well as in-depth analysis of our patent data. They saw this as a way to assist our company in strategic and investment... May. 30, 2002 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 16,787 | By Sean McMullan In developing Web applications, the most common method for displaying multiple rows of data on a Web page has been to use the HTML element. Presenting the user with a static table of data might be fine in some instances, but if you're trying to develop a more user-friendly applica... Apr. 18, 2002 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 35,155 Replies: 1 | By Mark O'Neill Wireless transmission is becoming more and more common for many document types, and XML is no exception. But XML itself presents a number of challenges to the wireless medium. This article, the first in a two-part series, describes these challenges, and describes techniques that can be... Feb. 22, 2002 12:00 AM EST Reads: 13,326 | By Steve Hoenisch The power and elegance of XSLT - the Extensible Stylesheet Language for Transformations - stems from its ability to transform XML documents into other output formats like HTML, fulfilling one of the original promises of XML: separating content from presentation. XSLT is particularly po... Feb. 22, 2002 12:00 AM EST Reads: 12,032 | By Steve Hoenisch You've probably heard the propaganda by now: XML blesses you with a way to separate content from presentation. Separation in turn yields productive gains over HTML and other data formats used to manage content. In a process sometimes called single sourcing, the content of an XML... Dec. 28, 2001 12:00 AM EST Reads: 10,456 Replies: 2 | By Steve Hoenisch Introductions to XML all too often ignore the power of the attribute. It gets neglected in favor of the element's ability to capture the structure of a document or the meaning of content. But in developing flexible, reusable document models and in capturing metainformation about struct... Nov. 1, 2001 12:00 AM EST Reads: 14,105 | By Steve Hoenisch No, the abbreviation DTD is not etymologically related to a similar abbreviation from medical science, namely, DTs (or delirium tremens), a violent delirium with tremors, which is induced by the prolonged use of alcohol. Though in absorbing the intricacies of DTDs and trying to develop... Aug. 17, 2001 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 11,846 Replies: 1 | By Steve Hoenisch This month's tutorial, the second in a series, picks up where last month's left off - on the path toward publishing your résumé on the Internet as an XML document. Last month (XML-J, Vol. 2, issue 5) I presented an overview of XML, described its basic building blocks, and demonstrated ... Jun. 3, 2001 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 12,508 | By Steve Hoenisch XML. And XSLT, DTD, XPath, XSL-FO, XLink, XPointer, SAX, and DOM. To the uninitiated, all the talk about XML quickly dissolves into an alphabet soup of W3C recommendations, abbreviations, and acronyms. May. 22, 2001 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 10,452 | By Jim Gabriel By 2005 XML and its derivatives will be fundamentally redefining the process and technology by which literally every business transaction is conducted. All major software and hardware players in the market are claiming to support XML. But do you (or your colleagues) need to learn it? W... Oct. 16, 2000 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 9,398 | By Zvi Schreiber At Tradeum Inc. we became early adopters of XML just a few months after the publication of the XML standard in February 1998. Our reasons were compelling: we were creating a dynamic trading engine that implements auctions and true exchanges in a business-to-business environment. Aug. 18, 2000 12:00 AM EDT Reads: 10,258 | By Bob DuCharme Of all the standards to accompany XML that are currently in progress at the W3C, few are more anxiously awaited than the Schema standard - the specification that provides an alternative to XML 1.0 DTDs as a way to describe a document's structure. But what's wrong with XML 1.0 DTDs? How... Feb. 28, 2000 12:00 AM EST Reads: 8,922 |
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