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Cocoon 2 Programming: Web Publishing with XML and Java [Paperback]

Bill Brogden , Conrad D'Cruz , Mark Gaither
1.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 18, 2002 0782141315 978-0782141313 1
Thanks to the tireless efforts of open-source developers, Cocoon has quickly gained visibility as the preeminent XML-based Web publishing framework. Unfortunately, its documentation remains a significant shortcoming. If you're new to Cocoon, gaining a sense of exactly what you can do with it can be difficult, and actually getting started can be even harder.
Cocoon 2 Programming: Web Publishing with XML and Java clearly explains the value of Cocoon and helps you build on your familiarity with XML and Java Servlets as you design, build, and implement a range of Cocoon applications. You'll begin by learning to control presentation for various platforms, both wired and wireless. Then you'll move on to Cocoon's capabilities for logic control and content management, using both sitemaps and XSP to create a site dynamically generated from a variety of data sources and types.
As you'll see, Cocoon also supports powerful organizing techniques known as design patterns, and you'll master their use in both presentation and content generation. These are essential tools for the planning of your site; for after it's implemented, you'll command powerful techniques for site management and optimization.
The Web's dependence on XML is growing rapidly--and with it the list of companies that have adopted Cocoon. Is Cocoon for you? Cocoon 2 Programming will guide you through your decision and far beyond, providing all the assistance you need to build a dynamic, XML-based site--and keep moving into the future.

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Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover

Thanks to the tireless efforts of open-source developers, Cocoon has quicklygained visibility as the preeminent XML-based Web publishing framework.Unfortunately, its documentation remains a significant shortcoming. Ifyou’re new to Cocoon, gaining a sense of exactly what you can do with itcan be difficult, and actually getting started can be evenharder.

Cocoon 2 Programming: Web Publishing with XML and Javaclearly explains the value of Cocoon and helps you build on your familiarity withXML and Java Servlets as you design, build, and implement a range of Cocoonapplications. You’ll begin by learning to control presentation for variousplatforms, both wired and wireless. Then you’ll move on to Cocoon’scapabilities for logic control and content management, using both sitemaps andXSP to create a site dynamically generated from a variety of data sources andtypes.

As you’ll see, Cocoon also supports powerful organizingtechniques known as design patterns, and you’ll master their use inboth presentation and content generation. These are essential tools for theplanning of your site; for after it’s implemented, you’ll commandpowerful techniques for site management and optimization.

TheWeb’s dependence on XML is growing rapidly—and with it the list ofcompanies that have adopted Cocoon. Is Cocoon for you? Cocoon 2Programming will guide you through your decision and far beyond, providingall the assistance you need to build a dynamic, XML-based site—and keep moving into the future.

About the Author

Bill Brogden is a longtime computer programmer and wrote the best-selling Java 2 Exam Cram from Coriolis. He has also written for Sun's Advanced Technology Guides and the XML.com website. He is the author of Sybex's SOAP Programming with Java. Conrad D'Cruz has 14 years' experience with programming, including Java and XML, and is also an instructor in Web technolgoies. Mark Gaither is a 10-year computer industry veteran who has built sophisticated web systems for the Texas Department of Commerce, TManage, Inc., Activerse, High End Systems, Instant Sports, and HTMLScript.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Sybex; 1 edition (October 18, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0782141315
  • ISBN-13: 978-0782141313
  • Product Dimensions: 7.5 x 0.8 x 9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 1.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,259,984 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Desperately seeking editing January 11, 2003
Format:Paperback
What the authors of this book desperately needed was an editor. This book is a mess. There is no sense of flow. There is no attempt by the authors to explain a topic and then delve further into it building upon what they show us. Instead we get detail. We are told Cocoon is made up of these frameworks and these frameworks use these design patterns and are made up of these pieces which are made up of these pieces. And in the end we know no more than when we started. We are told Cocoon contains these Java classes and are given a sentence explaining each one. We are given lists of SAX classes with no clear explanation of why we should be interested. There are lots of tables and lists and charts that explain nothing. The book never gives a clear explanation of what Cocoon does or how Java fits into Cocoon. The chapter on LogicSheets is a perfect example. There are thirty three tables in this chapter going page after page with no clear explanation of what the tables mean. Then the example at the end of the chapter is so trivial as to be meaningless. In fact, the examples throughout the book are much too simplistic and don't demonstrate the power of Cocoon. There is no question that an enormous amount of research went into this book. It's a shame that the authors weren't able to present that research in a useful way.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars ... before disaster sets in. December 22, 2002
Format:Paperback
Deal with a thing while it is still nothing; keep a thing in order before disaster sets in. A quote from Lao Tzu on the cover of this book which the Sybex production team would have done well to have heeded.

It does not help that the competition - Zeigeler and Langham's offering from New Riders - is both clear, structured and liberally sprinkled with examples. This only accentuates the contrast with this exhibit, which leaves the reader as confused after closing the covers as before he or she opened them. No, correction, make that more confused.

There is no lack of substance here, but also no shape, no argument and no goal. Cocoon is a system where data flows naturally from generators, through transformers, and is dispatched on its way by a final serialiser component. Yet, here in chapter four, the authors announce unconvincingly that a explanation in reverse sequence is ... errr ... in order. Off they go explaining serialisers. Fine. Chapter five, bafflingly, skips transformers and discusses site maps. We finally reach generators in chapter eight. Is this the wrong end of the telescope or are we staring into the proverbial liquid filled boot?

It goes on like this, avoiding any form of educative example and meandering though theory without ever fully explaining why and where. To use a generator I need to know what it generates, but I can search in vain for coverage of even a fraction of Cocoon's generators.

The book almost hits its stride in a reasonable explanation of XSP but then blows it , with a chapter on logic sheets. How would you explain what a logic sheet is? Why, obvious! by listing twenty seven tables of unannotated data before offering any explanation how to put this information to use.

Oh dear. I can imagine the work the writers put into this book.... Read more ›

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Dissapointing December 31, 2002
Format:Paperback
When I originally saw this book, I was intrigued by an alternative way of presenting this fairly complicated material and the seemingly relevant examples. I felt that it was generally incomplete and scattered.

Take the section on custom Generators, for example. The example is derived from an example is a previous book written by another Sybex book on XML and JSP, so it seemed like a nice comparison with an alternative technology. The introduction to the example discusses the dynamics of a branching survey and why a custom Generator is sometimes necessary. Unfortunately, the example doesn't follow through on the promise or the lesson. The example code that I downloaded from the website turned out to be incomplete and inconsistent with the book. Although I eventually got the example running, the end result wasn't compelling enough for me to understand the purpose for writing the custom Generator in the first place.

I was dissapointed and frustrated with this book. For those trying to learn about Cocoon I would suggest Zeigeler and Langham's New Riders book (Cocoon: Building XML Applications).

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Too little too late January 16, 2003
Format:Paperback
Six months ago, as no Cocoon book existed yet, this thin volume could have been interesting, but with the release of Moczar and Aston it is simply not worth the money anymore.

It is often rather superficial and is packed with questionnable fillers à la Wrox: one really wonders why the authors and the publisher felt compelled to include useless 'introductions' to css, xhtml and xsl (and more) in a book on cocoon!

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