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    Xml, Managing Data Exchange

    Posted By: tot167
    Xml, Managing Data Exchange

    Timothy Ross, "Xml, Managing Data Exchange"
    Global media | 2008 | ISBN: 8189940880 | 325 pages | PDF | 1,9 MB

    Introduction
    There are four central problems in data management: capture, storage,
    retrieval, and exchange. The purpose of this book is to address XML, a
    technology for managing data exchange. The foundational XML chapters in
    this book are structured by a ‘data model’ approach. The first chapter
    introduces the reader to the XML document, XML schema, and XML
    stylesheet with a single entity example. Subsequent chapters expand upon
    the XML basics with multiple-entity examples and a one-to-one relationship,
    a one-to-many relationship, or a many-to-many relationship.
    XML is a tool used for data exchange. Data exchange has long been an issue
    in information technology, but the Internet has elevated its importance.
    Electronic data interchange (EDI), the traditional data exchange standard for
    large organizations, is giving way to XML, which is likely to become the data
    exchange standard for all organizations, irrespective of size.
    EDI supports the electronic exchange of standard business documents and is
    currently the major data format for electronic commerce. A structured format
    is used to exchange common business documents (e.g., invoices and
    shipping orders) between trading partners. In contrast to the free form of email
    messages, EDI supports the exchange of repetitive, routine business
    transactions. Standards mean that routine electronic transactions can be
    concise and precise. The main standard used in the United States and
    Canada is known as X.12, and the major international standard is
    UN/EDIFACT. Firms adhering to the same standard can share data
    electronically.
    The Internet is a global network potentially accessible by nearly every firm,
    with communication costs typically less than those of traditional EDI.
    Consequently, the Internet has become the electronic transport path of
    choice between trading partners. The simplest approach is to use the
    Internet as a means of transporting EDI documents. But because EDI was
    developed in the 1960s, another approach is to reexamine the technology of
    data exchange. A result of this rethinking is XML, but before considering XML
    we need to learn about SGML, the parent of XML.





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