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- From: Jeffrey I Condon/Cupertino/IBM <jicondon@us.ibm.com>
- To: xml-dev@lists.xml.org
- Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2000 17:50:59 -0400
AlphaWorks just put eight popular XML tools now available for resale
license
Xeena, XML EditorMaker, XML Productivity Kit, XTransGen, XML Lightwieght
Extractor, XML Master, and XML Security Suite
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http://www-4.ibm.com/software/developer/library/xml-aw-license.html?open&l=xml-dev,t=gr,p=awlisc
* Xeena, a visual XML editor for editing XML documents derived from any
valid DTD.
* XML EditorMaker, a text-based XML document editor. This tool
automatically creates visual, Java-based XML editors that a developer can
use to easily create & modify XML documents.
* XML Productivity Kit, which allows developers to rapidly integrate XML
documents into a Java development environment.
* XTransGen, which enables developers to easily define and store the
mapping relationship
between two XML DTDs.
* XML Lightweight Extractor, which allows a developer to define the sources
of information
for a particular XML document.
* XML Master, a tool for creating custom, Java-based logic for the
manipulation of XML
documents. Developers can build programming constructs for a particular XML
document type
and then automatically generate Java code that is imported into a Java
development
environment (e.g., VisualAge for Java).
* XML Security Suite, which supports Xerces-J 1.1, was made available for
commercial license in August 2000. It includes security features such as
digital signature, element-wise encryption, and access control to Internet
B2B apps. The suite provides a reference implementations of DOMHASH a
proposed canonicalized digest value for XML document, in conformance with
RFC 2803. It also includes GUI-based sample programs for ASN.1/XML
Translator and Element-wise Encryption libraries.
* Although not included in the aW commercial licensing program, XML Parser
for Java, a.k.a XML4J, is available for licensing beyond 90 days under the
standard Apache 1.1.1 license. XML4J is one of the most popular Java
language XML parsers available. First released in 1998, IBM contributed
XML4J to the Xerces-J parser in the Apache XML project in 1999.
XML Matters #3: Getting started with the DocBook XML dialect
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In the third installment of his "XML Matters" column, David Mertz gets you
started with DocBook, an SGML/XML dialect that describes the content of
technical articles and other documents. David discusses the benefits of
using DocBook, and then describes how to plan and modularize a large
document conversion project.
http://www-4.ibm.com/software/developer/library/xml-matters3.html?open&l=136,t=gr,p=XML.mat3
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