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XML How to Program (1st Edition)

XML How to Program (1st Edition)

List Price: $92.00
Your Price: $87.40
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not suitable for self-teaching, barely good for classroom
Review: I recently took an XML class at my university, and Deitel's "XML How to Program" was our textbook.

I have to say, it's one of my least-favorite XML books--nay, one of my least-favorite *computer* books overall.

Sure, it's thick and heavy, something many geeks like in a book (myself included). But within the covers are sometimes rambling discussions about a particular topic that leave you still wondering what you were supposed to learn, while other sections get cut short just when things are getting interesting.

My biggest beef: You won't be able to complete some of the exercises without the use of outside resources. Of course, multiple sources are great for any project, but you should certainly be able to answer a book's exercises with just that book! (Specifically, one exercise was within the XSLT chapter, and deals with a number-type element.)

When I was assigned to write an essay on a topic, XML Topic Maps, I first consulted the book. Only a couple of paragraphs as I recall. RDF, an up-and-coming XML technology, gets nary a page.

Mind you, there is a bit of good in the book, mainly with the introductory material. It's a bit Java-centric, but that's to be expected, and there is a decent Java primer in the back of the book. I also appreciate the code samples on both the CD-ROM and Deitel's Web site.

I wanted to like the book, but I found it useless for most of the projects I was working on. In a different class, we used Marchal's "XML by Example, 2/e", and I vastly prefer that book over this one. Especially with the price of the Deitel book, I can't recommend this one to anyone.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: XML: How to Program is Great
Review: I was about to give up on finding a book on Java and XML. I had already purchased two in the past that lacked real-life programming examples and seemed to be a regurgitation of formal XML specification. But then I did a search on Amazon.com and found this book. Just by knowing the author, I knew it was going to be a great book. I've used Deitel's "C: How to Program" as a classroom textbook and "Internet and World Wide Web: How to Program" as a professional reference.

I can't say enough about the book. Numerous professional quality applications and examples; programming tips; concise, well-written prose; exercises at the end of each chapter. The authors are great teachers, not just great programmers dumping their vast technical knowledge into a book. The only thing I wished they'd done was to broaden the discussion on XML Entities. I found myself referring to another text to get a handle on their use (but, maybe that's just me!). However, I was able to apply other examples and bits of applications write out the book and retrofit into a Java/XML program I was developing at work.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Waste of money
Review: I've been programming for a few years and have a computer science degree.
I'd heard all the hype around XML and XML related technologies, and while looking for a book on the subject, stumbled upon the XML Training course.
At the time there were no reviews for it so I took a chance.
It seemed to good to be true. All of the XML stuff was included, plus lots of stuff I don't need, like the first few chapters which cover HTML (this should have warned me) plus it includes a short primer on Java and some other stuff as well.

Well, to make a long story short, I stopped reading it in the middle.

It just seems to me that the authors just wanted to make a fast buck by getting out an XML book that tries to cover everything. The book isn't even all written by the authors !! In the acknowledgements, they list about 10 different people who contributed to various chapters!

The book reads like a dry reference manual (that's not even %100 complete) with a lot of examples thrown in.
The coverage is shallow and doesn't go into any reasoning or teach you how to USE XML technologies, it only teaches you how to WRITE for XML technologies.
The examples themselves are at the same level of "hello world" stuff.
I guess I'm "spoiled" from reading books like the O'Reilly series (most of them) or Thinking in Java.

I've read about 30 programming books over the past few years, and this one is the worst.
I'm sure you can learn more from better resources available freely on the web.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: xml How to Program
Review: it includes rich materials for beginner who can master the xml in an interesting way.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good, but a tad expensive...
Review: Most of the stuff you get from Deitel & Deitel is pretty good. I recommend their books as a whole. Some people mention their credentials (like having a degree, etc, etc) like this somehow demonstrates that their review is less biased or more credible somehow. Yes, I do have a degree in computer science and I've been programming for DECADES. Does this mean anything? Not really, but read on...

This book costs $72.00. There aren't a lot of pages in it, when you consider the price. However, the pages are very glossy and very bright. This is some very high-quality paper. Is that worth the extra cost? Maybe not.

This is clearly a book that's situated for a beginner. You don't really get into the good stuff until Chapter 5, presuming you're fairly comfortable with HTML. Some other reviewers clearly took this to heart and quit the book early. It's not THAT bad. Once you're out of the history and background and review, it gets cooking, and there are about 27 chapters.

Everything about the book's presentation screams quality. Unfortunately, this is reflected in the price. This is the first XML book I've gotten, so I can't say how little or how much it covers, but I didn't feel "ripped off". The end of chapter sections are quite extensive; this would make the perfect textbook for an XML class that presumes no prior knowledge of HTML.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good, but a tad expensive...
Review: Most of the stuff you get from Deitel & Deitel is pretty good. I recommend their books as a whole. Some people mention their credentials (like having a degree, etc, etc) like this somehow demonstrates that their review is less biased or more credible somehow. Yes, I do have a degree in computer science and I've been programming for DECADES. Does this mean anything? Not really, but read on...

This book costs $72.00. There aren't a lot of pages in it, when you consider the price. However, the pages are very glossy and very bright. This is some very high-quality paper. Is that worth the extra cost? Maybe not.

This is clearly a book that's situated for a beginner. You don't really get into the good stuff until Chapter 5, presuming you're fairly comfortable with HTML. Some other reviewers clearly took this to heart and quit the book early. It's not THAT bad. Once you're out of the history and background and review, it gets cooking, and there are about 27 chapters.

Everything about the book's presentation screams quality. Unfortunately, this is reflected in the price. This is the first XML book I've gotten, so I can't say how little or how much it covers, but I didn't feel "ripped off". The end of chapter sections are quite extensive; this would make the perfect textbook for an XML class that presumes no prior knowledge of HTML.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Other reviewers must work for the author
Review: The book doesn't show a user how to use the lang. in a real world environment. The examples in the book are to simple for the user to understand how to transfer the in to something a user can use.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: A Big Waste
Review: This book is a big waste of money. Besides being very expensive, most of the book covers other subjects other than XML, with little relevance to XML. Although there is some useful information on using XML with Java, there is way too much information on the Microsoft implementation of XML, (when the book actually gets around to mentioning XML) and the standardized W3 version of XML seems to be included as an afterthought. The reviewers who gave this book such a high rating probably didn't read the book very well, or are hired by the publisher. A much better book is the Liz Castro Quickstart guide to XML (for a fourth of the price of the Deitel!), although it is centered around the W3's standard for XML, and doesn't mention Microsoft's implementation. Castro text, however, is more suited to learning from the ground up. The Deitel text is a disaster and I wish that I had just kept my money.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: first reasonable book
Review: this book is extremely good with live codes & with hundrends of real world application. when i start reading it i was begginer to XML but now i feel i m an expert of java & XML both this is only bcz of this fine collection of XML thanx to Harvey M. Deitel && Paul J. Deitel

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: GET THIS BOOK! Wonderful format, etc
Review: This book was written in easily understood jargon that helped take the mystery out of XML programming for me. Additionally, the links to actual working code allowed me the opportunity to watch it work. The self review and tests at the end of each chapter really ensures that you get everything out of the chapter that you need to continue on. Loved it. You will, too.


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