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Pro XML Development with JavaTM Technology
Extensible Markup Language (XML) is based on simple, platform-independent rules for representing structured textual information. The platform-independent nature of XML makes it an ideal format for exchanging structured textual information among disparate applications. Therefore, at the heart of it, XML is about interoperability. XML 1.0 was made a W3C1 Recommendation in 1998. Sun formally introduced the Java program- ming language in 1995, and within a few years Java had cemented its status as the preferred programming and execution platform for a dizzyingly diverse set of applications. Incidentally, both Java and XML were shaped with an eye toward the Internet. Therefore, it is not surprising that most of the XML-related W3C Recommendations have inspired corresponding Java-based application programming interfaces (APIs). Some of these Java APIs are part of the Java Platform Standard Edition (J2SE) platform; others are part of various open source or proprietary endeavors. XML-related W3C Recommendations and their corresponding Java APIs are the main focus of this book.
Ajay Vohra and Deepak Vohra - Personal Name
978-1-59059-706-4
NONE
Information Technology
English
2006
1-470
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