XML Hacks

(Source Template)


reviews/xml_hacks.xml

    <?xml version="1.0"?>
    
    
    <page title="XML Hacks" keywords="">
    
    <item>
      <p>Author: Michael Fitzgerald</p>
      <p>ISBN: <isbn>0-596-00711-6</isbn></p>
      <p>Publisher: O'Reilly (2004)</p>
      <p>Reviewed by: Dave Cross</p>
    </item><item>
    
                                                                                     
    <p>As a Perl programmer, my first instinct when given some XML to process           
    is to grab the appropriate Perl module (probably XML::XPath or                   
    XML::LibXML) and use that to do whatever I need to. Although that                
    usually gets the job done, reading this book opened my eyes to a number          
    of other XML processing tools that will sometimes be more useful than a          
    Perl program. Actually Perl doesn't get mentioned at all in the index,           
    whereas Java gets half a column of entries.</p>                                      
                                                                                     
    <p>A lot of the book isn't aimed at the kind of person who is comfortable           
    firing up an editor writing a program. Many of the hacks introduce               
    ready-made applications that handle a number of different XML tasks. For         
    example there are applications that, given an XML document, will take a          
    first pass at creating an XML Schema or DTD for the document. This is            
    something that would be an interesting project to write for yourself,            
    but if you just need the schema it's nice to know that someone else has          
    already written the application for you.</p>                                         
                                                                                     
    <p>One of the most interesting chapters for me was the one about editing            
    XML. My usual tool for that is xml-mode in Xemacs but the book                   
    introduced me to a number of other possibilities. The one that                   
    particularly caught my eye was nXML for Emacs. Unfortunately it's not            
    currently compatible with Xemacs, so I need to try out some of the other         
    editors that are discussed.</p>                                                      
                                                                                     
    <p>Like all of O'Reilly's Hacks books, this book is aimed at a very wide            
    audience. Some of the tools are Open Source and some of them are                 
    commercial. Some of them run on only one platform and some of them will          
    run anywhere. That has the potential to be a little frustrating when you         
    find a tool that looks really useful, only to find out that it only runs         
    on Windows. Fortunately the authors are aware of this problem and make a         
    real effort to present tools that run on as wide a range of platforms as         
    possible. If one hack presents a tool that only runs on Windows then you         
    can be sure that the next hack has a similar tool that runs somewhere else.</p>      
                                                                                     
    <p>The audience is diverse along other dimensions too. There are hacks              
    aimed at people who will just want to save a Word document in DocBook            
    format (hint: use OpenOffice) and at the other end of the spectrum there         
    are hacks aimed at people who want to create SOAP services. There are            
    hacks aimed at all levels of producing and using XML.</p>                            
                                                                                     
    <p>It's an inevitable consequence of this type of book that not everyone is         
    going to find all of it useful. But the authors are obviously experts in         
    their field and they explain themselves very clearly. I thought I knew a         
    lot about processing XML but I discovered a lot of new and interesting           
    things from this book. If you want a good overview of the various ways           
    that XML can be useful to you, then this book would be a very good start.</p>
    	</item>
    </page>
    
    

reviews/xml_hacks.xml

    <?xml version="1.0"?>
    
    
    <page title="XML Hacks" keywords="">
    
    <item>
      <p>Author: Michael Fitzgerald</p>
      <p>ISBN: <isbn>0-596-00711-6</isbn></p>
      <p>Publisher: O'Reilly (2004)</p>
      <p>Reviewed by: Dave Cross</p>
    </item><item>
    
                                                                                     
    <p>As a Perl programmer, my first instinct when given some XML to process           
    is to grab the appropriate Perl module (probably XML::XPath or                   
    XML::LibXML) and use that to do whatever I need to. Although that                
    usually gets the job done, reading this book opened my eyes to a number          
    of other XML processing tools that will sometimes be more useful than a          
    Perl program. Actually Perl doesn't get mentioned at all in the index,           
    whereas Java gets half a column of entries.</p>                                      
                                                                                     
    <p>A lot of the book isn't aimed at the kind of person who is comfortable           
    firing up an editor writing a program. Many of the hacks introduce               
    ready-made applications that handle a number of different XML tasks. For         
    example there are applications that, given an XML document, will take a          
    first pass at creating an XML Schema or DTD for the document. This is            
    something that would be an interesting project to write for yourself,            
    but if you just need the schema it's nice to know that someone else has          
    already written the application for you.</p>                                         
                                                                                     
    <p>One of the most interesting chapters for me was the one about editing            
    XML. My usual tool for that is xml-mode in Xemacs but the book                   
    introduced me to a number of other possibilities. The one that                   
    particularly caught my eye was nXML for Emacs. Unfortunately it's not            
    currently compatible with Xemacs, so I need to try out some of the other         
    editors that are discussed.</p>                                                      
                                                                                     
    <p>Like all of O'Reilly's Hacks books, this book is aimed at a very wide            
    audience. Some of the tools are Open Source and some of them are                 
    commercial. Some of them run on only one platform and some of them will          
    run anywhere. That has the potential to be a little frustrating when you         
    find a tool that looks really useful, only to find out that it only runs         
    on Windows. Fortunately the authors are aware of this problem and make a         
    real effort to present tools that run on as wide a range of platforms as         
    possible. If one hack presents a tool that only runs on Windows then you         
    can be sure that the next hack has a similar tool that runs somewhere else.</p>      
                                                                                     
    <p>The audience is diverse along other dimensions too. There are hacks              
    aimed at people who will just want to save a Word document in DocBook            
    format (hint: use OpenOffice) and at the other end of the spectrum there         
    are hacks aimed at people who want to create SOAP services. There are            
    hacks aimed at all levels of producing and using XML.</p>                            
                                                                                     
    <p>It's an inevitable consequence of this type of book that not everyone is         
    going to find all of it useful. But the authors are obviously experts in         
    their field and they explain themselves very clearly. I thought I knew a         
    lot about processing XML but I discovered a lot of new and interesting           
    things from this book. If you want a good overview of the various ways           
    that XML can be useful to you, then this book would be a very good start.</p>
    	</item>
    </page>