Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q2597535> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 28 of
28
with 100 triples per page.
- Q2597535 subject Q8078015.
- Q2597535 abstract "XML data binding refers to a means of representing information in an XML document as a business object in computer memory. This allows applications to access the data in the XML from the object rather than using the DOM or SAX to retrieve the data from a direct representation of the XML itself.An XML data binder accomplishes this by automatically creating a mapping between elements of the XML schema of the document we wish to bind and members of a class to be represented in memory. When this process is applied to convert an XML document to an object, it is called unmarshalling. The reverse process, to serialize an object as XML, is called marshalling.Since XML is inherently sequential and objects are (usually) not, XML data binding mappings often have difficulty preserving all the information in an XML document. Specifically, information like comments, XML entity references, and sibling order may fail to be preserved in the object representation created by the binding application. This is not always the case; sufficiently complex data binders are capable of preserving 100% of the information in an XML document.Similarly, since objects in computer memory are not inherently sequential, and may include links to other objects (including self-referential links), XML data binding mappings often have difficulty preserving all the information about an object when it is marshalled to XML.An alternative approach to automatic data binding relies instead on hand-crafted XPath expressions that extract the data from XML. This approach has a number of benefits. First, the data binding code only needs proximate knowledge (e.g., topology, tag names, etc.) of the XML tree structure, which developers can determine by looking at the XML data; XML schemas are no longer mandatory. Furthermore, XPath allows the application to bind the relevant data items and filter out everything else, avoiding the unnecessary processing that would be required to completely unmarshall the entire XML document. The drawback of this approach is the lack of automation in implementing the object model and XPath expressions. Instead the application developers have to create these artifacts manually.".
- Q2597535 wikiPageExternalLink XMLDataBinding.htm.
- Q2597535 wikiPageExternalLink databinding.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q1043076.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q1127410.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q1141067.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q15777.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q16340.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q166142.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q1688838.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q175263.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q2063.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q2093.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q2115.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q223679.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q2517175.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q281876.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q373671.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q42478.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q4479242.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q518797.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q541759.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q577094.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q7864738.
- Q2597535 wikiPageWikiLink Q8078015.
- Q2597535 comment "XML data binding refers to a means of representing information in an XML document as a business object in computer memory. This allows applications to access the data in the XML from the object rather than using the DOM or SAX to retrieve the data from a direct representation of the XML itself.An XML data binder accomplishes this by automatically creating a mapping between elements of the XML schema of the document we wish to bind and members of a class to be represented in memory.".
- Q2597535 label "XML data binding".