The following list of resources may be helpful to you while learning
XML. This is not a complete list and you are encouraged to find other
resources on the Web or through other sources.
Book Titles Part of the power of XML is that it can be used for
both publishing to an end user and for data definitions (schema) for the
interchange of data between computer programs. Many of the books in the
list below favor one of the two points of view. XML for the World
Wide Web: Visual QuickStart Guide presents a publishing point of
view. Beginning XML bridges the gap between both, while
Professional XML focuses on the data perspective.
- Benoit, Marcahl. XML by Example. Indianapolis,
IN: QUE, 2000.
- Castro, Elizabeth. XML for the World Wide Web: Visual
QuickStart Guide. Berkeley, CA: Peachpit Press,
2001.
- Graham, Tony. Unicode: A Primer. United
States of America: M& T Books, 2000.
- Harold, Elliotte Rusty. XML Bible. United States
of America: IDG Books Worldwide, Inc, 1999.
- Hunter, David, Curt Cagle, Dave Gibbons, Nikola Ozu, Jon Pinnock, and Paul
Spencer. Beginning XML. Birmingham, UK: Wrox
Press Ltd, 2000.
- Martin, Didier, Mark Birbeck, Michael Kay, Brian Loesgen, Jon Pinnock,
Steven Livingstone, Peter Stark, Kevin Williams, RIchard Anderson, Stephen
Mohr, David Baliles, Bruce Peat, and Nikola Ozu. Professional
XML. Birmingham, UK: Wrox Press Ltd, 2000.
- North, Simon and Paul Hermans. Teach Yourself XML in 21
Days. United States of America: Sams, March 1999.
- Ray, Eric T. Learning XML. United States of
America: O'Reilly & Associates, 2001. A sample chapter
from this book can be found on the O'Reilly Web site at http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/learnxml/chapter/ch02.html
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