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| Building Web Services with Java: Making Sense of XML, SOAP, WSDL, and UDDI | | Author: | Staff of Sams Publishing | ISBN: | 0672326418 | Format: | Handover | Publish Date: | June, 2005 | | | | | | | | | Book Review | | |
Book Description Sams has assembled a team of experts in web services to provide you with a detailed reference guide on XML, SOAP, USDL and UDDI. Building Web Services with Java is in its second edition and it includes the newest standards for managing security, transactions, reliability and interoperability in web service applications. Go beyond the explanations of standards and find out how and why these tools were designed as they are and focus on practical examples of each concept. Download your source code from the publisher's website and work with a running example of a full enterprise solution. Learn from the best in Building Web Services with Java.
Download Description Building Web Services with SOAP, XML, and UDDI assumes proficiency with Java and with distributed computing tools. Throughout the book, examples will be presented using Java and the Apache SOAP platform, although a set of sidebars will address .NET development, which Microsoft developers will use to deploy Web services. The book uses progressive disclosure to present an increasingly complex project as it moves through its development cycle. The final section of the book presents linking the completed project with other systems built in J2EE and .NET.
From the Publisher The Second Edition of Building Web Services with Java builds on the expert insight offered in the award-winning first edition. See why this book won the Web Services Journal's Editor's Chioce award. The authors are among the leading architects of Web services standards and include current and former members of IBM's Web services team, the W3C XML Protocol Working Group, Apache's Axis project, and various Java expert groups. They bring insider insight into the design and creation of the tools covered in the book, and an understanding of the problems faced by developers putting these tools to work.
From the Inside Flap The Second Edition of Building Web Services with Java builds on the expert insight offered in the award-winning first edition. See why this book won the Web Services Journal's Editor's Chioce award. The authors are among the leading architects of Web services standards and include current and former members of IBM's Web services team, the W3C XML Protocol Working Group, Apache's Axis project, and various Java expert groups. They bring insider insight into the design and creation of the tools covered in the book, and an understanding of the problems faced by developers putting these tools to work.
Building Web Services with Java: Making Sense of XML, SOAP, WSDL, and UDDI FROM THE PUBLISHER Building Web Services with Java: Making Sense of XML, SOAP, WSDL, and UDDI, Second Edition presents the Web services model and provides a guide to using the most current, most stable, and most effective standards available today. The expert authors tap into the growing body of best practices emerging in the Web services space and show you how to apply these concepts to your projects. Based on open industry standards, Web services enable your software to integrate with partners and clients in a fashion that is loosely coupled, simple, and platform-independent. Building Web Services with Java: Making Sense of XML, SOAP, WSDL, and UDDI, Second Edition explains the various emerging standards associated with Web services, such as Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP), Web Services Description Language (WSDL), and Universal Description Discovery and Integration (UDDI). Building Web Services with Java: Making Sense of XML, SOAP, WSDL, and UDDI, Second Edition discusses Web services from a business and technical perspective, explaining and demonstrating how Web services can be used to address various business problems, in particular those related to application integration. The authors present running examples throughout the book, implemented in Java and the Apache Software Foundation's Axis Web services infrastructure.
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