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The Best Software Writing I

Joel Spolsky

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Software Engineering/Programming and Operating Systems

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2005 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-1-59059-500-8

ISBN electrónico

978-1-4302-0038-3

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Apress 2005

Tabla de contenidos

Strong Typing vs. Strong Testing

Bruce Eckel

In this chapter, I worked through an application that uses PHP, MySQL, XML, and XSLT to display and manage weather content. The application stores all of the data within a MySQL database. The application retrieves the relevant database records with PHP 5. It uses the new PHP 5 DomDocument object to generate the XML document. The structure of the generated XML documents is flexible enough to cope with several different scenarios.

In order to display the XML content within the application, I used XSLT stylesheet transformations to generate XHTML. You saw how to use XSLT variables and include conditional logic in the stylesheets.

This chapter wraps up the book. I hope you’ve enjoyed reading about XML and that you’ve expanded your knowledge. XML is a flexible approach to building both client- and server-side web applications, and I hope the contents of this book will make you as enthusiastic about XML as I am!

Pp. 67-77

Processing Processing

Paul Ford

In this chapter, I worked through an application that uses PHP, MySQL, XML, and XSLT to display and manage weather content. The application stores all of the data within a MySQL database. The application retrieves the relevant database records with PHP 5. It uses the new PHP 5 DomDocument object to generate the XML document. The structure of the generated XML documents is flexible enough to cope with several different scenarios.

In order to display the XML content within the application, I used XSLT stylesheet transformations to generate XHTML. You saw how to use XSLT variables and include conditional logic in the stylesheets.

This chapter wraps up the book. I hope you’ve enjoyed reading about XML and that you’ve expanded your knowledge. XML is a flexible approach to building both client- and server-side web applications, and I hope the contents of this book will make you as enthusiastic about XML as I am!

Pp. 79-93

Great Hackers

Paul Graham

In this chapter, I worked through an application that uses PHP, MySQL, XML, and XSLT to display and manage weather content. The application stores all of the data within a MySQL database. The application retrieves the relevant database records with PHP 5. It uses the new PHP 5 DomDocument object to generate the XML document. The structure of the generated XML documents is flexible enough to cope with several different scenarios.

In order to display the XML content within the application, I used XSLT stylesheet transformations to generate XHTML. You saw how to use XSLT variables and include conditional logic in the stylesheets.

This chapter wraps up the book. I hope you’ve enjoyed reading about XML and that you’ve expanded your knowledge. XML is a flexible approach to building both client- and server-side web applications, and I hope the contents of this book will make you as enthusiastic about XML as I am!

Pp. 95-109

The Location Field is the New Command Line

John Gruber

In this chapter, I worked through an application that uses PHP, MySQL, XML, and XSLT to display and manage weather content. The application stores all of the data within a MySQL database. The application retrieves the relevant database records with PHP 5. It uses the new PHP 5 DomDocument object to generate the XML document. The structure of the generated XML documents is flexible enough to cope with several different scenarios.

In order to display the XML content within the application, I used XSLT stylesheet transformations to generate XHTML. You saw how to use XSLT variables and include conditional logic in the stylesheets.

This chapter wraps up the book. I hope you’ve enjoyed reading about XML and that you’ve expanded your knowledge. XML is a flexible approach to building both client- and server-side web applications, and I hope the contents of this book will make you as enthusiastic about XML as I am!

Pp. 111-117

Starbucks Does Not Use Two-Phase Commit

Gregor Hohpe

In this chapter, I worked through an application that uses PHP, MySQL, XML, and XSLT to display and manage weather content. The application stores all of the data within a MySQL database. The application retrieves the relevant database records with PHP 5. It uses the new PHP 5 DomDocument object to generate the XML document. The structure of the generated XML documents is flexible enough to cope with several different scenarios.

In order to display the XML content within the application, I used XSLT stylesheet transformations to generate XHTML. You saw how to use XSLT variables and include conditional logic in the stylesheets.

This chapter wraps up the book. I hope you’ve enjoyed reading about XML and that you’ve expanded your knowledge. XML is a flexible approach to building both client- and server-side web applications, and I hope the contents of this book will make you as enthusiastic about XML as I am!

Pp. 119-124

Passion

Ron Jeffries

In this chapter, I worked through an application that uses PHP, MySQL, XML, and XSLT to display and manage weather content. The application stores all of the data within a MySQL database. The application retrieves the relevant database records with PHP 5. It uses the new PHP 5 DomDocument object to generate the XML document. The structure of the generated XML documents is flexible enough to cope with several different scenarios.

In order to display the XML content within the application, I used XSLT stylesheet transformations to generate XHTML. You saw how to use XSLT variables and include conditional logic in the stylesheets.

This chapter wraps up the book. I hope you’ve enjoyed reading about XML and that you’ve expanded your knowledge. XML is a flexible approach to building both client- and server-side web applications, and I hope the contents of this book will make you as enthusiastic about XML as I am!

Pp. 125-128

C++—The Forgotten Trojan Horse

Eric Johnson

In this chapter, I worked through an application that uses PHP, MySQL, XML, and XSLT to display and manage weather content. The application stores all of the data within a MySQL database. The application retrieves the relevant database records with PHP 5. It uses the new PHP 5 DomDocument object to generate the XML document. The structure of the generated XML documents is flexible enough to cope with several different scenarios.

In order to display the XML content within the application, I used XSLT stylesheet transformations to generate XHTML. You saw how to use XSLT variables and include conditional logic in the stylesheets.

This chapter wraps up the book. I hope you’ve enjoyed reading about XML and that you’ve expanded your knowledge. XML is a flexible approach to building both client- and server-side web applications, and I hope the contents of this book will make you as enthusiastic about XML as I am!

Pp. 129-133

How Many Microsoft Employees Does it Take to Change a Lightbulb?

Eric Lippert

In this chapter, I worked through an application that uses PHP, MySQL, XML, and XSLT to display and manage weather content. The application stores all of the data within a MySQL database. The application retrieves the relevant database records with PHP 5. It uses the new PHP 5 DomDocument object to generate the XML document. The structure of the generated XML documents is flexible enough to cope with several different scenarios.

In order to display the XML content within the application, I used XSLT stylesheet transformations to generate XHTML. You saw how to use XSLT variables and include conditional logic in the stylesheets.

This chapter wraps up the book. I hope you’ve enjoyed reading about XML and that you’ve expanded your knowledge. XML is a flexible approach to building both client- and server-side web applications, and I hope the contents of this book will make you as enthusiastic about XML as I am!

Pp. 135-138

What to Do When You’re Screwed

Michael “Rands” Lopp

In this chapter, I worked through an application that uses PHP, MySQL, XML, and XSLT to display and manage weather content. The application stores all of the data within a MySQL database. The application retrieves the relevant database records with PHP 5. It uses the new PHP 5 DomDocument object to generate the XML document. The structure of the generated XML documents is flexible enough to cope with several different scenarios.

In order to display the XML content within the application, I used XSLT stylesheet transformations to generate XHTML. You saw how to use XSLT variables and include conditional logic in the stylesheets.

This chapter wraps up the book. I hope you’ve enjoyed reading about XML and that you’ve expanded your knowledge. XML is a flexible approach to building both client- and server-side web applications, and I hope the contents of this book will make you as enthusiastic about XML as I am!

Pp. 139-149

Larry’s Rules of Software Engineering #2: Measuring Testers by Test Metrics Doesn’t

Larry Osterman

In this chapter, I worked through an application that uses PHP, MySQL, XML, and XSLT to display and manage weather content. The application stores all of the data within a MySQL database. The application retrieves the relevant database records with PHP 5. It uses the new PHP 5 DomDocument object to generate the XML document. The structure of the generated XML documents is flexible enough to cope with several different scenarios.

In order to display the XML content within the application, I used XSLT stylesheet transformations to generate XHTML. You saw how to use XSLT variables and include conditional logic in the stylesheets.

This chapter wraps up the book. I hope you’ve enjoyed reading about XML and that you’ve expanded your knowledge. XML is a flexible approach to building both client- and server-side web applications, and I hope the contents of this book will make you as enthusiastic about XML as I am!

Pp. 151-156