Old Articles: <Older 31-40 Newer> |
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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 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 Tarak Modi |
Axis: The next generation of Apache SOAP Apache SOAP has evolved to the point of its own extinction. Apache's Axis project is a complete re-architecture of its SOAP implementation and has many new features previously unheard of in Apache SOAP. Here's a high-level look at how Axis takes Apache SOAP to the next level... |
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... |
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 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. |
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). |
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 September 2001 Dirk Reinshagen |
XML messaging, Part 3 This article introduces the JAXM API and the ebXML XML messaging standard. These two standards, working together, enable you to send SOAP messages in a message-oriented fashion... |
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... |
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