Improving an XML Feed Display Through CSS and XSLT
XML feeds, though useful, are boring to look at in a browser because they are simple XML files. It's possible though to make them easier on the eye, and in this article we'll look at two ways of doing that. First, we'll use simple CSS properties to format each XML node, and then we'll use a little more complex but much more powerful XSL transformation.
xefteri.com (2005). Articles>Web Design>XML>XSL
A brief and basic tutorial about the XML-based scripting language.
Zvon (2007). Resources>Web Design>XML>XSL
Enabling Web Service with Common Information Model
In this article we will introduce the concept of WS-Management and Common Information Model (CIM). By exploring the SOAP message with multiple examples, we will learn how to transfer CIM operations through WS-Management SOAP messages.
Hao, Sun. IBM (2009). Articles>Web Design>Information Design>XML
It’s time we came to grips with the fact that not every “document” can be a “web page.” Some forms of writing just cannot be expressed in HTML—or they need to be bent and distorted to do so. But for once, XML might actually help.
Clark, Joe. List Apart, A (2009). Articles>Web Design>Document Design>XML
RDFa (“Resource Description Framework in attributes”) is having its five minutes of fame: Google is beginning to process RDFa and Microformats as it indexes websites, using the parsed data to enhance the display of search results with “rich snippets.”
Birbeck, Mark. List Apart, A (2009). Articles>Web Design>Standards>XML
How to use the common jQuery JavaScript library to parse XML data sources, and to integrate them into your pages.
Harbour, Jared. Think2Loud (2008). Articles>Web Design>XML>JavaScript
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