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Part V: Querying and The World Wide Web
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Part V: Querying and The World Wide Web
by Stephen Buxton, Jim Melton
Querying XML
Cover image
Title page
Table of Contents
The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Data Management Systems
Copyright
Dedication
Foreword
Preface
Part I: XML: Documents and Data
Chapter 1: XML
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Adding Markup to Data
1.3 XML-Based Markup Languages
1.4 XML Data
1.5 Some Other Ways to Represent Data
1.6 Chapter Summary
Chapter 2: Querying
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Querying Traditional Data
2.3 Querying Nontraditional Data
2.4 Chapter Summary
Chapter 3: Querying XML
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Navigating an XML Document
3.3 What Do You Know about Your Data?
3.4 Some Ways to Query XML Today
3.5 Chapter Summary
Part II: Metadata and XML
Chapter 4: Metadata – An Overview
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Structural Metadata
4.3 Semantic Metadata
4.4 Catalog Metadata
4.5 Integration Metadata
4.6 Chapter Summary
Chapter 5: Structural Metadata
5.1 Introduction
5.2 DTDs
5.3 XML Schema
5.4 Other Schema Languages for XML
5.5 Deriving an Implied Schema from a DTD
5.6 Chapter Summary
Chapter 6: The XML Information Set (Infoset) and Beyond
6.1 Introduction
6.2 What Is the Infoset?
6.3 The Infoset Information Items and Their Properties
6.4 The Infoset vs. the Document
6.5 The XPath 1.0 Data Model
6.6 The Post-Schema-Validation Infoset (PSVI)
6.7 The Document Object Model (DOM) – An API
6.8 Introducing the XQuery Data Model
6.9 A Note Regarding Data Model Terminology
6.10 Chapter Summary and Further Reading
Part III: Managing and Storing XML for Querying
Chapter 7: Managing XML: Transforming and Connecting
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Transforming, Formatting, and Displaying XML
7.3 The Relationships between XML Documents
7.4 Relationship Constraints: Enforcing Consistency
7.5 Chapter Summary
Chapter 8: Storing: XML and Databases
8.1 Introduction
8.2 The Need for Persistence
8.3 SQL/XML’s XML Type
8.4 Accessing Persistent XML Data
8.5 XML on the Fly: Nonpersistent XML Data
8.6 Chapter Summary
Part IV: Querying XML
Chapter 9: XPath 1.0 and XPath 2.0
9.1 Introduction
9.2 XPath 1.0
9.3 XPath 2.0 Components
9.4 XPath 2.0 and XQuery 1.0
9.5 Chapter Summary
Chapter 10: Introduction to XQuery 1.0
10.1 Introduction
10.2 A Brief History
10.3 Requirements
10.4 Use Cases
10.5 The XQuery 1.0 Suite of Specifications
10.6 The Data Model
10.7 The XQuery Type System
10.8 XQuery 1.0 Formal Semantics and Static Typing
10.9 Functions and Operators
10.10 XQuery 1.0 and XSLT 2.0 Serialization
10.11 Chapter Summary
Chapter 11: XQuery 1.0 Definition
11.1 Introduction
11.2 Overview of XQuery
11.3 The XQuery Processing Model
11.4 The XQuery Grammar
11.5 XQuery Expressions
11.6 FLWOR Expressions
11.7 Error Handling
11.8 Modules and Query Prologs
11.9 A Longer Example with Data
11.10 XQuery for SQL Programmers
11.11 Chapter Summary
Chapter 12: XQueryX
12.1 Introduction
12.2 How Far to Go?
12.3 The XQueryX Specification
12.4 XQueryX By Example
12.5 Querying XQueryX
12.6 Chapter Summary
Chapter 13: What’s Missing?
13.1 Introduction
13.2 Full-Text
13.3 Update
13.4 Chapter Summary
Chapter 14: XQuery APIs
14.1 Introduction
14.2 Alphabet-Soup Review
14.3 XQJ – XQuery for Java
14.4 SQL/XML
14.5 Looking Ahead
Chapter 15: SQL/XML
15.1 Introduction
15.2 SQL/XML Publishing Functions
15.3 XML Data Type
15.4 XQuery Functions
15.5 Managing XML in the Database
15.6 Talking the Same Language – Mappings
15.7 Chapter Summary
Part V: Querying and The World Wide Web
Chapter 16: XML-Derived Markup Languages
16.1 Introduction
16.2 Markup Languages
16.3 Discovery on the World Wide Web
16.4 Customized Query Languages
16.5 Chapter Summary
Chapter 17: Internationalization: Putting the “W” in “WWW”
17.1 Introduction
17.2 What Is Internationalization?
17.3 Internationalization and the World Wide Web
17.4 Internationalization Implications: XPath, XQuery, and SQL/XML
17.5 Chapter Summary
Chapter 18: Finding Stuff
18.1 Introduction
18.2 Finding Structured Data – Databases
18.3 Finding Stuff on the Web – Web Search
18.4 Finding Stuff at Work – Enterprise Search
18.5 Finding Other People’s Stuff – Federated Search
18.6 Finding Services – WSDL, UDDI, WSIL, RDDL
18.7 Finding Stuff in a More Natural Way
18.8 Putting It All Together – The Semantic Web+
Appendix A: The Example
Appendix B: Standards Processes
Appendix C: Grammars
Index
About the Authors
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Chapter 16: XML-Derived Markup Languages
Part V
Querying and The World Wide Web
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