Java Web Services Unleashed

  • Authors:
  • Robert J. Brunner;Darren Govoni;Joseph Weber;Frank Cohen;Francisco Curbera;Steven Haines

  • Affiliations:
  • -;-;-;-;-;-

  • Venue:
  • Java Web Services Unleashed
  • Year:
  • 2002

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Abstract

From the Publisher:In-depth coverage of Web Services technology for the Java developer. Thorough coverage of the JAX* (Java APIs for XML) pack, Sun's new collection of Java APIs to facilitate Web service development. Contributions from recognized Web services experts and architects, including the Web Services team at IBM. Filled with real-world, practical examples of Web Service development with Java technologies. Web Services are a natural evolution of component-based programming. Using Web Services, applications can access components dynamically across the Web. Sun is devoting a significant portion of its resources toward encouraging developers to learn to create Web services with Java, and positioning Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) as a solid competitor to Microsoft's .NET architecture for service development. Java Web Services Unleashed explores everything Java developers need for Web service development. Starting with the business considerations and roles of service-related technologies within the Java architecture, the authors then demonstrate applications using the "pillars" of Web service creation: SOAP, UDDI, and WSDL. Next, the book introduces the JAX* pack - a set of Java APIs for XML programming that ease and enhance service development - using real-world examples explaining the importance of each JAX* API. Later chapters include a series of larger case studies of service development using many Java technologies including JSP and EJB. About the Author: Lead author Robert J. Brunner is an author and member of the research staff at the California Institute of Technology, where his research focuses on knowledge discovery in large, distributed datasets. He also was an instructor at the Center for Advanced Computing Technology at the California State Polytechnic University in Pomona, where he taught and developed applications using both Java and XML. He's currently a member of the Java Data-mining Expert Group, and is also writing Java Enterprise Database Development for Addison-Wesley.