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The XML Schema Complete Reference [Paperback]

Cliff Binstock , Dave Peterson , Mitchell Smith , Mike Wooding , Chris Dix , Chris Galtenberg


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Product Description

Product Description

Written for intermediate to advanced students with a basic understanding of XML and OOP, this book shows how to write an XML Schema, but doesn't force the student into one particular solution. Instead, it provides the student with enough information to make informed choices. The book provides a myriad of detailed examples, which cover the features specified by the W3C XML Schema Recommendation. The book also teaches how to use XML to model data that is stored in objects through data-oriented Schema in SQL relational databases, document oriented design schema, and application schema. The authors discuss current XML Schemas in operation today, as well as XML Schema's use in creating, discovering, and using web services.

From the Back Cover

With the successful implementation of XML Schema, developers are learning how to increase productivity, improve software reliability, minimize development time, and decrease time to market. This in-depth reference is an all-in-one resource designed to help developers leverage the power and potential of XML schemas by offering a complete roadmap to their creation, design, and use.

This authoritative reference and tutorial is filled with practical insights and detailed examples. The book begins by providing a conceptual introduction to XML Schema. From there, coverage shifts to the W3C Schema Recommendation and how to apply schemas to specific business goals. The authors provide insight and instruction throughout on integrating XML schemas into existing technologies such as .NET, Java, Visual Basic, Oracle, and more. The book concludes with a complete case study designed to reinforce and illustrate material covered.

Additional topics include:

  • Applications for schemas
  • Simple and complex types
  • XML schema processing and validation
  • Namespaces in XML
  • Using schemas with DOM and SAX
  • XML schema document syntax
  • XML Information Sets
  • XML Schema applications of XPath

Whether designing a schema from scratch or integrating schemas into contemporary technologies, The XML Schema Complete Reference is the most complete and definitive sourcebook available for the XML Schema environment.



0672323745B08162002

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Amazon.com:  3 reviews
14 of 16 people found the following review helpful
Need Help Writing Your Own Schemas? Try this. 10 Nov 2002
By W Boudville - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
If you are already using XML, it is probably with DTDs, as this was the first implementation of XML. Both came out of SGML, in which the role of DTDs was defined in the early 1990s. Unfortunately, the drawbacks of DTDs were not fully appreciated until they began to be widely used in XML. A DTD cannot easily constrain an integer variable to a range of values from 5 to 10, say. It has no conception of common primitive types like float or double found in many programming languages. Also, the structure of a DTD is quite unlike that of the XML document it supports. From the point of view of writing parsers, you end up effectively needing two parsing algorithms to read a DTD and an XML document. XML Schemas answer all these issues. Plus namespaces are built into them, to handle collisions in tag names when you use multiple Schemas in a document. With DTDs, namespaces came into being after DTDs were first defined, and had to be bolted on in a most awkward fashion. XML Schema notation for namespaces is much more natural.

The problem right now with XML Schema is that it is new. Most XML books use DTDs, in part because when they were written, the Schema specification was not finished by W3C (in May 2001). Some XML books since then do describe Schema. They usually give a good overview and provide examples that work for the XML document examples they describe. So if you have an application that you want to write a Schema for, you can get started. But chances are, you soon run into problems if your application is not a carbon copy of a text's example. You soon need some Schema component or attribute whose usage or even existence was not disclosed in that book.

This book addresses that shortfall. It provides at least one example of how to use every attribute of EVERY Schema element. A formidably comprehensive task. Which accounts for the near thousand page size. But this is far more than just some dictionary-style exposition. They describe important closely related issues, like how to use the DOM and Xerces SAX parsers, and the different outlooks these take. Also, from your viewpoint of how to write a Schema for YOUR application, they offer a top-down approach. Schemas can be result-oriented or data-oriented. You get enough details to help decide which case yours fits. This can greatly aid developing a facile "natural" Schema. One where once you have it and an example XML document that uses it, the layout taxonomy seems axiomatic. Which should be your goal. It is not enough to define a Schema that can hold all the information you have. The skill is in making a Schema that does that and has a clear, obvious logic. Because in many cases others, probably not as technically adept as you, get to fill in documents based on it. So the logic should be clear to them. Even if they do not directly write into an XML document, but build it from a GUI, the clearer the Schema, the easier it is for someone to build a GUI to populate a document based on it.

The authors also provide a website (XMLSchemaReference.com) that has the code described in the book, and many more examples. Worth bookmarking.

So try this book and its website if you need an authoritative guide to writing Schemas.

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
Use this book all the time 1 Oct 2003
By P. Vogel - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
I've been doing a whole bunch of schema development work lately and I find that I've been referring to this book frequently. My only criticism is that the some of the early chapters are a little too theoretical for a plain old programmer like myself--but the extensive reference material provides me with all the information that I've needed to build a complex set of interlocking schemas.
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Certainly not a book for learning about XML schemas 5 Jun 2004
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Certainly not a book for learning about XML schemas, may be used as a reference. Very theoretical, particularly the first few chapters, and strikingly similar to W3 recommendations. If you are just starting with XML schemas, pick a different book.

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