![]() ![]() With the extensive source code included in the book, it's nice to find the source online (see Resources). A real-world application is also created, utilizing JSP, JDBC, JavaMail, and XML. The 30-plus pages of JSP syntax in this book are probably the best of the bunch and not limited to the one chapter. One thing not mentioned is the Cocoon XML publishing framework project of The Apache Software Foundation.įollowing the book's XML guts is coverage of JavaServer Pages 1.0. It seems to cover just about everything for learning XML from DTDs to DOM, to processing with SAX and Sun's Java-XML toolkit. For learning about using XML with Java, the book serves as a good resource. Using XML as a Java Serialization format is discussed but not demonstrated. ![]() They explore HTML 4.0.1, XML 1.0, namespaces in XML, associating style sheets with XML documents, XHTML 1.0, XSLT 1.0, and XPath 1.0. There is nothing too complicated, but you'll find enough help to get a shopping-cart application going.Īfter Nakhimovsky and Myers create and explain the foundation for three-tier Web applications, they move on to explaining XML. The generalized application requires a little formal language theory and understanding of grammars and parsers. The JDBC coverage is minimal, moving quickly into a set of library classes that utilize connection pooling and caching. In the next couple of chapters, Nakhimovsky and Myers work to create a generalized three-tier application, and then introduce JDBC. However, the coverage is more of a review of the API than a tutorial on how to use it. ![]() If you were not familiar with servlets before reading this book, there is enough to get you started. Still working through the first chapter, you'll find an introduction to the servlet API, its life cycle, and session tracking. ![]()
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