|
[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] ANN: XML Tutorials in London
I was asked whether it was appropriate to announce XML tutorials on XML-DEV, and I am happy to include the following announcement from Alan Paton. These tutorials appear to venture into uncharted waters (e.g. metadata) and so are in the spirit of XML-DEV. P. ---------------------------from Alan Paton------------------------------------- ============================= THREE XML TUTORIALS IN LONDON ============================= >From International experts Tim Bray and Henry Thompson (1) XML and Network Publishing Technologies 1 Day Tutorial, London, 23 November 1998, Presented by: Tim Bray (2) The XML Technology Bootstrap (Includes 'hands-on' session using XML) 1 Day Tutorial, London, 24 November 1998, Presented by: Tim Bray (3) Putting XML to Work: Style, Metadata and API 1 Day Tutorial, London, 25 November 1998, Presented by: Henry S. Thompson FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT: Technology Appraisals Ltd +44 (0)181 893 3986 +44 (0)181 744 1149 Email: techapp@c... URL: www.techapps.co.uk Please note fees apply to attend these tutorials ++++++++ +++++++ +++++++ +++++++ +++++++ XML AND NETWORK PUBLISHING TECHNOLOGIES: OUTLINE CONTENTS Design goals for network publishers * User-driven design goals * Management-driven design goals * Cost-driven design goals XML's role: the un-met needs of today's network publishers * SGML, HTML, and PDF: reasons to love and fear them * Coming over the horizon: VRML, multimedia, ActiveX, Java * XML's unfilled niche XML - a new business case and technology platform * Historical background and motivation * The ongoing XML specification process * A walk through the XML specification * How XML relates to SGML* How XML relates to HTML * How XML changes the SGML Business Case ++++++++ +++++++ +++++++ +++++++ +++++++ THE XML TECHNOLOGY BOOTSTRAP INCLUDES 'HANDS-ON' SESSION USING XML): OUTLINE CONTENTS History and context * The problems of SGML and HTML * The history and role of XML The XML standard * Introduction and goals * Logical and physical structure of documents * Well-formedness * Characters * Character data, binary data, and markup * Comments and processing instructions * CDATA Sections * Prolog and Document Type Declaration * Start-Tags and End-Tags * Element and Attribute Declarations * Conditional Sections * Character and Entity References * Entity Declarations * Run-time Treatment of Entities * Notation Declarations Hands-on: using XML * Creating well-formed documents * Introduction to Lark, an XML Processor * Compiling and running Java programs * A table-of-contents application * A statistical analysis application Writing an XML Processor * Construct recognition * Error handling * Validation * API Issues Attendance requirements This tutorial requires programming competence and some familiarity with parsing concepts. Experience with Java is not required, but exposure to some language in the "C" family (C, C++, Objective C) would be very helpful. The cost of the seminar includes the book Learn Java Now from Microsoft Press, which includes a CD-ROM version of Microsoft Visual J++, one of the leading development environments. ++++++++ +++++++ +++++++ +++++++ +++++++ PUTTING XML TO WORK: STYLE, METADATA AND API: OUTLINE CONTENTS Electronic Style * A brief history: the bad old days (wordprocessors); the recent past (proprietary systems); the present (HTML); the near future (a standards-based approach: structure (XML), linking (XLL) and appearance (XSL/CSS)). * Electronic style specificiation * The right tool for the job: three style standards * DSSSL: Document Style Semantics and Specification Language. * CSS: Cascading Style Sheets. * XSL: XML Style Language. * Which is right for what situation? * CSS tools and examples * An introduction to controlling HTML document appearance with CSS. * XSL tools and examples * An introduction to the draft XSL standard Constraining document structure An introduction to XML-Data: how does it allow you to say just as much about the structure of your documents as you wish, and no more? How inheritance allows specialisation of document structure while still allowing general-purpose tools to operate. Describing document content An introduction to RDF: how does it provide a standard way of telling the WWW what your document is about, who wrote it and who should read it. Relation to other standards, including PICS and Digital Signatures. Application access to documents An introduction to the DOM: how does it provide a parser (and programming language) independent API for standardised access to (HTML/XML) document content? What DOM-supporting tools are available already? Summary conclusions What should your company be doing about deploying XML? ++++++++ +++++++ +++++++ +++++++ +++++++ Tim Bray is the principal of Textuality, a consulting practice headquartered, in Vancouver, Canada. Tim is co-editor of the XML Specification and is currently a voting member of the World Wide Web Consortium's SGML Editorial Review Board. Tim has served as Manager of the New Oxford English Dictionary Project, and as a founder, Managing Director, and Senior Vice President of Open Text, a well-known player in the network publishing technology marketplace. Since departing Open Text, Tim, through Textuality, has provided consultancy to organizations including IBM, Merrill Lynch, the U.S. Department of Energy, Keio University, Jeppeson Sanderson, Diebold, and Encyclopedia Britannica. He is the author of Lark, the first generally available XML parser; Lark is implemented in the Java language. ++++++++ +++++++ +++++++ +++++++ +++++++ Henry S. Thompson is Reader in Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science at the University of Edinburgh, where he is chiefly engaged in research and research management in the Language Technology Group of the Human Communication Research Centre. He has published several language research corpora on CD-ROM, and has developed software systems for SGML and DSSSL. He was a member of the original W3C SGML Working Group, responsible for the first drafts of the XML standard. He was a co-author of the XML-Data proposal and the original XSL proposal and is now a member of the XSL working group. He is the author of XED, the first freely available XML editor, and XSLJ, an implementation of XSL on top of JADE. ++++++++ +++++++ +++++++ +++++++ +++++++ Peter Murray-Rust, Director Virtual School of Molecular Sciences, domestic net connection VSMS http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/vsms, Virtual Hyperglossary http://www.venus.co.uk/vhg xml-dev: A list for W3C XML Developers. To post, mailto:xml-dev@i... Archived as: http://www.lists.ic.ac.uk/hypermail/xml-dev/ To (un)subscribe, mailto:majordomo@i... the following message; (un)subscribe xml-dev To subscribe to the digests, mailto:majordomo@i... the following message; subscribe xml-dev-digest List coordinator, Henry Rzepa (mailto:rzepa@i...)
|
PURCHASE STYLUS STUDIO ONLINE TODAY!Purchasing Stylus Studio from our online shop is Easy, Secure and Value Priced! Download The World's Best XML IDE!Accelerate XML development with our award-winning XML IDE - Download a free trial today! Subscribe in XML format
|
|||||||||

Cart








