Condition - Very Good
The item shows wear from consistent use, but it remains in good condition and functions properly. Item may arrive with damaged packaging or be repackaged. It may be marked, have identifying markings on it, or have minor cosmetic damage. It may also be missing some parts/accessories or bundled items.
Get Past the Tags!: How to Read (and Write) an XML Document
Is this book for you? Yes, if you are a writer. Not a programmer. Not a suit.
Yes, if you must create content that is
- Consistently structured and formatted
- Modular
- Re-usable
- Manipulated by many programs as you write, store, and publish
- Displayed in many formats on many platforms and in many media.
In this book: You’ll learn how XML grew out of familiar aspects of ordinary writing, such as proofreader’s marks. XML just formalizes many tactics we have already developed, in the history of writing. You’ll learn how to create content within an XML environment.
Payoff:When you complete this book, you’ll be able to read an XML document—getting past the tags. And you’ll be able to create XML elements, attributes, comments, processing instructions, and, yes, entity references.
How it works:You get step-by-step instructions on building each part of an XML document. No more abstract talk. You can see exactly how each tag is constructed, from beginning to end.
- Diagrams: You see the structure in a large diagram, so you can tell where each piece of punctuation goes, and what the components do.
- Examples: You get examples, so you can see exactly how the tags develop, and how they look when completed.
- Answers: If you have questions, we’ve got answers. Addressing the most common questions that writers raise in discussions, the FAQs give you context and background on the tags.
- Lookups: You’ll find a thorough glossary and index in the back, so you can use this book as a reference, to look up a concept, tag, or syntax.