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There are 130 articles & tutorials regarding "SOAP".

25.) ebXML Ropes in SOAP
by Alan Kotok April 04, 2001 The Electronic Business XML ( ebXML ) project released three more technical specifications for review on 28 March, including a new draft document on messaging services. This part of ebXML -- formerly known as transport, routing, and packaging -- had made more early progress than the other technical features, but it also came under more pressure to include the work of other initiatives, specifically the Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP). Enhancements to...
Found at XML.com

26.) Seal Up Your SOAP
Secure your suds with Parasoft's SOAPTest, get parallel with Digipede Network, and spruce up your test program with AccordSQA's SmarteScript 4.0 and SmarteLoad 1.0. Also, three new books enhance your PM, C++ and Swing skills. By Rick Wayne Keeping out crackers (the black-hat kind, I mean, not saltines or rednecks) is like trying to seal a leaky basement: Every time you plug one hole, the water flows to another. Our firewalls sealed off everything except for port 80; naturally enough,...
Found at Software Development Online

27.) Low Bandwidth SOAP
by Jeff McHugh August 19, 2003 Introduction With the mobile phone industry reporting better than expected sales , and news that, by the end of this year, smart phones are expected to outsell hand-held computers, it should come as no surprise that wireless application development is on the rise. Sun recently announced that by the end of 2004 there may well be more than 200,000,000 Java-enabled mobile handsets. Yet, with all the attention being paid to these microdevices (i.e., low...
Found at XML.com

28.) From XML-RPC to SOAP: A Migration Guide
by Rich Salz December 18, 2002 What is XML-RPC? As you might expect from the name, XML-RPC is a way of using XML to send classic Remote Procedure Calls (RPC) over the net. XML-RPC's use of XML is very simple. It doesn't use namespaces. It doesn't even use attributes. Poking at the reasons behind technology standards can lead to interesting results. The really good ones, like the first ANSI C specification, include a detailed rationale for key decisions. Most internet standards don't...
Found at XML.com

29.) Using XPath with SOAP
by Massimiliano Bigatti September 16, 2003 XPath is a language for addressing parts of an XML document, used most commonly by XSLT. There are various APIs for processing XPath. For the purposes of this article I will use the open source Jaxen API. Jaxen is a Java XPath engine that supports many XML parsing APIs, such as SAX, DOM4J, and DOM. It also supports namespaces, variables, and functions. XPath is useful when you need to extract some information from an XML document, such as a...
Found at XML.com

30.) Getting Your Feet Wet With SOAP
by Paul Adams 25 Feb 2002 Paul Adams is a full-time freelance writer and New Yorker, and a part-time director and poter. Page 1 At Webmonkey, the favorite technologies are, of course, those that inspire the most punning. So Java is way up there (all those "brewing up" and "double tall" opportunities), as is HTML ("HTML is for Children" and "HTML and Back"), while topics like CGI and XSLT aren't really a whole lot of pun. Thus I am extremely lucky to be allowed to write about SOAP, one...
Found at Webmonkey

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