Processing Xml With Java - A Guide To Sax, Dom, Jdom, Jaxp, And Trax Free Open Book

Processing Xml With Java - A Guide To Sax, Dom, Jdom, Jaxp, And Trax

Previous Section Next Section

Summary

XML protocols allow widely distributed systems to communicate with each other over standard HTTP. These protocols have many advantages compared with traditional RPC systems such as CORBA and RMI, including simplicity, transparency, and platform independence. Using HTTP allows clients and servers to run on very disparate systems. Using XML allows the data exchanged to achieve any necessary level of complexity. There are very few situations where XML does not provide an obvious means of encoding information. Using schemas even allows XML's fundamentally text-based format to assign data types to elements so that nontext data such as floating point numbers and dates can be exchanged.

Some XML protocols are based on custom XML applications. Slashdot's Backslash is one example. Others use standard formats such as RSS, XML-RPC, and SOAP. RSS is limited to distributing news headlines and summaries. XML-RPC is more general, allowing the transmission of method calls and arguments to remote systems that invoke those methods and return a value. SOAP is the most general of all, allowing the exchange of XML elements of arbitrary complexity, which may or may not be treated as method calls and arguments.

Throughout the rest of this book, we're going to build multiple servers and clients for RSS, XML-RPC, SOAP, and custom systems. We'll use Java's networking classes to hide the fact that the XML documents we're working with are coming from and going to the network. We're going to focus on the contents of those documents, and how to access and manipulate those contents from inside our own Java programs.

    Previous Section Next Section


         Main Menu
    Main Page
    Table of content
    Copyright
    Praise for Elliotte Rusty Harold's 'Processing XML with Java™'
    List of Examples
    List of Figures
    Preface
    Part I: XML
    Chapter 1. XML for Data
    Chapter 2. XML Protocols: XML-RPC and SOAP
    XML as a Message Format
    HTTP as a Transport Protocol
    RSS
    Customizing the Request
    XML-RPC
    SOAP
    Custom Protocols
    Summary
    Chapter 3. Writing XML with Java
    Chapter 4. Converting Flat Files to XML
    Chapter 5. Reading XML
    Part II: SAX
    Part III: DOM
    Part IV: JDOM
    Part V: XPath/XSLT
    Part VI: Appendixes


    More Books
    PHP Hacks
    Processing Xml With Java - A Guide To Sax, Dom, Jdom, Jaxp, And Trax
    The Koran (Holy Qur'an)
    Macromedia Flash 8 Bible
    Search Engine Optimization for Dummies
    YouTube Traffic
    PHP 5 for Dummies
    Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets
    Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
    The Pilgrim's Progress
    Wireless Hacks
    Flash Hacks. 100 Industrial-Strength Tips & Tools
    PayPal Hacks. 100 Industrial-Strength Tips and Tools
    Amazon Hacks
    Pdf Hacks
    The Da Vinci Code
    Google Hacks
    The Holy Bible
    Windows XP For Dummies
    Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
    Seo Book
    Upgrading and Repairing Networks
    Macromedia Dreamweaver 8 UNLEASHED
    Windows XP Annoyances
    Windows XP Hacks
    Microsoft Windows XP Power Toolkit
    Teach Yourself MS Office In 24Hours
    iPod & iTunes Missing Manual
    PC Hacks 100 Industrial-Strength Tips and Tools
    PC Overclocking, Optimization, and Tuning - 2th Edition
    PC Hardware In A Nutshell 3rd Edition
    PC Hardware in a Nutshell, 2nd Edition
    Upgrading and Repairing PCs
    Google for Dummies
    MySQL Cookbook
    Teach Yourself Macromedia Flash 8 In 24 Hours
    PHP CookBook
    Sams Teach Yourself JavaScript in 24 Hours
    PHP5 Manual
    Free Games Paper Airplanes
    500 Juegos Gratis 500 Giochi Gratis 500 Jeux Gratuits 500 Jogos Gratis 500 Kostenlose Spiele