by Shelley Powers – Considering that I’m “bringing on a book” on RDF this month, I thought it appropriate to answer Marc’s plea for meaningful, working examples of RDF apps and services, especially those that work with other RDF-based services. My problem, though, is that I have only a limited amoun
Tag: JSON / JAVA / XML
XML Files – XML Namespace Collisions, XmlNodeList and Deserialization, and More
CLR and XML namespaces, returning a nodeset, and XMLReader.
Use XML to Build Services Cheaply Using PHP and MySQL
Using the open source technologies of PHP and MySQL you can create server-side applications that abstract databases and return XML. Get all the flexibility of XML without laying out cash, and show your boss a cheap alternative to J2EE or .NET Web services in a runtime environment.
SVG: A Sure Bet
by Paul Prescod – In this article based on his keynote at the SVG Open Conference, Paul Prescod explains why he thinks SVG is set to be as ubiquitous as IP networking.
Java XML by Example (Part I): JAXP
Java promises “portable code” and XML assures “portable data”. These two technologies can be used together to architect enterprise application that work cross-platform and over the Internet. Sun Microsystems and various other organizations are continuously working to add and enhance XML/Web services
Command-line XML processing
by David Mertz – Most of the time, processing XML documents utilizes heavy-duty APIs and custom applications. However, the tradition of using small tools with I/O piped between them works fine on Unix-like platforms. Here, David shows you how you can use XML for this kind of quick-and-dirty processi
SOAP Message Transmission Optimization Mechanism
This document describes an abstract feature and a concrete implementation of it for optimizing the transmission and/or wire format of SOAP messages.
An XML Take on Tech·Ed
by Hitesh Seth – Microsoft’s flagship technology conference, commonly known as Tech·Ed, was held in Dallas in early June. Much has been written elsewhere about this event, but I would like to point out a couple of things I thought were quite significant, from an XML perspective.
Replacing the Internet Explorer context menu with a custom built context menu
By Natty Gur – This case study describes how to replace the default context menu shipped with the explorer, with a context menu that allows the programmer to set its pop-up items for each HTML tag, or HTML element with a name attribute and menu items that will always be displayed.
Extending RSS
by Danny Ayers – This article shows how the RDF foundation of RSS 1.0 helps when you want to extend RSS 1.0 for uses outside of strict news item syndication, and how existing RDF vocabularies can be incorporated into RSS 1.0. It concludes by providing a way to reuse these developments in RSS 2.0 fee
