000 02955nam a2200325Ia 4500
001 CAH00K14885000
003 FlBoTFG
005 20170124152729.0
008 120821s2013 flua b 001 0 eng
010 _a 2012025559
020 _a9781466512276
040 _aDLC
_beng
_cDLC
_dFlBoTFG
050 0 0 _aQ183.9
_b.P69 2013
092 _a006.74
_bP893
100 1 _aPozrikidis, C.
245 1 0 _aXML in scientific computing /
_cC. Pozrikidis.
260 _aBoca Raton :
_bCRC Press,
_c2013.
300 _axv, 243 p. :
_bill. ;
_c[ca. 23-29] cm.
490 1 _aChapman & Hall/CRC numerical analysis and scientific computing series
500 _a"A Chapman & Hall book."
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 0 _a1. Text and data formatting -- 2. Xml essential grammar -- 3. Xml data processing with xsl -- 4. Computing with xml/xsl -- 5. Producing and importing xml data.
520 _a"Preface. XML stands for extensible markup language. In fact, XML is not a language, but a systematic way of encoding and formatting data and statements contained in an electronic file according to a chosen tagging system. A tag may represent a general entity, a physical, mathematical, or abstract object, an instruction, or a computer language construct. The data can describe cars and trucks in a dealer's lot, the chapters of a book, the input or output of a scientific experiment or calculation, the eigenvalues of a matrix, and anything else that can be described by numbers and words. Data presentation and description In the XML framework, information is described and presented in the same doc- ument, thus circumventing the need for legends and explanations. For example, we may order: <breakfast> toast and eggs <breakfast> Further cooking instructions can be included between the breakfast tag enclosed by the pointy brackets (<>) and its closure denoted by the slash (/). Data reuse XML data (input) can be read by a person or parsed and processed by a program (application) that produces a new set of data (output.) Although the input is the same, the output depends on the interpretation of the tags formatting the data. The inherent polymorphism allows us to materialize the same original data in different ways. For example: 1. An author may write a book inserting formatting tags between words, equations, and figures according to xml conventions and grammar. The text (data) file can be processed to produce books with different appear- ances. 2. A scientist may write a finite-element code that produces output tagged according to xml conventions"--
_cProvided by publisher.
530 _aAlso available as an electronic resource.
650 0 _aXML (Document markup language)
650 0 _aScience
_xData processing.
650 0 _aNumerical analysis.
830 0 _aChapman & Hall/CRC numerical analysis and scientific computing.
945 _a001 and 003 modified with TFG record number on 2012/12/26
999 _c423348
_d423348