Querying XML, : XQuery, XPath, and SQL XML in context (The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Data Management Systems)
β Scribed by Jim Melton, Stephen Buxton
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 845
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
XML has become the lingua franca for representing business data, for exchanging information between business partners and applications, and for adding structure-and sometimes meaning-to text-based documents. XML offers some special challenges and opportunities in the area of search: querying XML can produce very precise, fine-grained results, if you know how to express and execute those queries.For software developers and systems architects: this book teaches the most useful approaches to querying XML documents and repositories. This book will also help managers and project leaders grasp how "querying XML" fits into the larger context of querying and XML. Querying XML provides a comprehensive background from fundamental concepts (What is XML?) to data models (the Infoset, PSVI, XQuery Data Model), to APIs (querying XML from SQL or Java) and more. * Presents the concepts clearly, and demonstrates them with illustrations and examples; offers a thorough mastery of the subject area in a single book. * Provides comprehensive coverage of XML query languages, and the concepts needed to understand them completely (such as the XQuery Data Model).* Shows how to query XML documents and data using: XPath (the XML Path Language); XQuery, soon to be the new W3C Recommendation for querying XML; XQuery's companion XQueryX; and SQL, featuring the SQL/XML * Includes an extensive set of XQuery, XPath, SQL, Java, and other examples, with links to downloadable code and data samples.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This is simply a great introduction to XQuery. In general this is a book rich on examples. I used this to test every other query, and gain a more thorough understand of the particular topic. The best way to learn a new language is to practice - right ? Besides the examples bit, I think this is a we
<p><span>Die Bedeutung von XML fΓΌr eine Layout-unabhΓ€ngige Beschreibung von Dokumenten und damit als Ausgangsformat fΓΌr Single-Source-Publishing sowie als Austauschformat beim elektronischen Datenaustausch ist heute unstrittig. Anhand vieler Beispiele lernen Sie, wie mit den Sprachen DTD und XML-Sch
The Web is causing a revolution in how we represent, retrieve, and process information Its growth has given us a universally accessible database-but in the form of a largely unorganized collection of documents. This is changing, thanks to the simultaneous emergence of new ways of representing data: