SharePoint designer tutorial [[electronic resource] ] : working with SharePoint websites : get started with SharePoint designer to put together a business site with SharePoint / / Mike Poole ; reviewer, John Jansen |
Autore | Poole Mike |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., 2008 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (188 p.) |
Disciplina | 004.6/82 |
Collana | From technologies to solutions |
Soggetto topico |
Business enterprises - Computer networks
Intranets (Computer networks) - Design Web servers |
ISBN |
1-281-73173-0
9786611731731 1-84719-443-5 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Copyright; Credits; About the Author; About the Reviewer; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: Introduction to SharePoint; What is SharePoint?; Why Choose SharePoint Designer?; What is SharePoint Designer?; Installing SharePoint Designer; Connecting to an Existing SharePoint Site; Further Information; Summary; Chapter 2: SharePoint Designer and its Environment; Development Tool Options; Tour of the Environment; Task Panes; Organizing Our Task Panes; Code View; The Button Bar; The Status Bar; Summary; Chapter 3: Adding Content and Tables; The Wine Company; Creating a New Site
Creating Our First PageAdding and Formatting Text; Previewing Our Page; Creating Hyperlinks; Adding Images; Creating Tables; Table and Cell Properties; Layout Tables; Organizing Our Files; Publishing Our Site; Viewing Our Page; Authorization; Editing Existing Sites; Summary; Chapter 4: Formatting Pages; The Wine Company Website; Creating Our Site; Creating a New Site; Creating Our Homepage; Publishing Our Site; Formatting Our Homepage; Using Layers; Adding an Image to Our Layer; Publishing Images; Renaming Our Styles; Cascading Style Sheets; Editing Styles; Master Pages Where Are Our Master Pages Stored?Creating a Master Page; Editing Our Master Page; Adding a Content Region; Saving Our Master Page; Attaching Our Master Page to an Existing Page; Creating a New Page Using a Master Page; Modifying the Master Page; Attaching Our StyleSheet to Our Master Page; Summary; Chapter 5: Collaborating with Other Contributors; Contributor Mode; Server-Based Sites versus Disk-Based Sites; Enabling Contributor Settings; Contributor Groups; Region Types; Setting Up Contribution on Our Master Page; The Contributor's Experience; Workflows; Workflow Designer Workflows and ListsDefining New Workflows; Summary; Chapter 6: Collecting Data; Data Sources; Creating Our XML Data Source; Creating a Data View; Adding and Deleting Records; InfoPath; Summary; Chapter 7: Displaying Data; Formatting the Data View; Direct Formatting; CSS Formatting; Conditional Formatting; Formatting Numbers; Filtering Data; Using Formulae; Sorting Data; Allowing Users to Sort the Data; Paging; Summary; Chapter 8: Adding Web Parts; What Are Web Parts?; Web Part Zones; Inserting a Web Part Zone; Inserting a Web Part; Adding Graphs; Summary; Chapter 9: Using ASP.NET Controls ASP.NET ControlsStandard Controls; Data Controls; Validation Controls; Navigation Controls; Login Controls; Adding a Simple Control; The Menu Control; The Calendar Control; Editing the web.config File; Validating Our Forms; Creating a Login Feature; Configuring SQL Server; Adding Our First User; Adding a New Virtual Server; Adding a Host Header; Adding an A Record; Extending the Virtual Server; Using Visual Studio's Web Site Administration Tool; Changing the Authentication Provider; Return to the web.config File; Additional Configuration Tweaks; Summary; Chapter 10: Integrating with Exchange Introduction to Outlook Web Access Web Parts |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910780758703321 |
Poole Mike | ||
Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., 2008 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
SharePoint designer tutorial : working with SharePoint websites : get started with SharePoint designer to put together a business site with SharePoint / / Mike Poole ; reviewer, John Jansen |
Autore | Poole Mike |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., 2008 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (188 p.) |
Disciplina | 004.6/82 |
Collana | From technologies to solutions |
Soggetto topico |
Business enterprises - Computer networks
Intranets (Computer networks) - Design Web servers |
ISBN |
1-281-73173-0
9786611731731 1-84719-443-5 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Copyright; Credits; About the Author; About the Reviewer; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: Introduction to SharePoint; What is SharePoint?; Why Choose SharePoint Designer?; What is SharePoint Designer?; Installing SharePoint Designer; Connecting to an Existing SharePoint Site; Further Information; Summary; Chapter 2: SharePoint Designer and its Environment; Development Tool Options; Tour of the Environment; Task Panes; Organizing Our Task Panes; Code View; The Button Bar; The Status Bar; Summary; Chapter 3: Adding Content and Tables; The Wine Company; Creating a New Site
Creating Our First PageAdding and Formatting Text; Previewing Our Page; Creating Hyperlinks; Adding Images; Creating Tables; Table and Cell Properties; Layout Tables; Organizing Our Files; Publishing Our Site; Viewing Our Page; Authorization; Editing Existing Sites; Summary; Chapter 4: Formatting Pages; The Wine Company Website; Creating Our Site; Creating a New Site; Creating Our Homepage; Publishing Our Site; Formatting Our Homepage; Using Layers; Adding an Image to Our Layer; Publishing Images; Renaming Our Styles; Cascading Style Sheets; Editing Styles; Master Pages Where Are Our Master Pages Stored?Creating a Master Page; Editing Our Master Page; Adding a Content Region; Saving Our Master Page; Attaching Our Master Page to an Existing Page; Creating a New Page Using a Master Page; Modifying the Master Page; Attaching Our StyleSheet to Our Master Page; Summary; Chapter 5: Collaborating with Other Contributors; Contributor Mode; Server-Based Sites versus Disk-Based Sites; Enabling Contributor Settings; Contributor Groups; Region Types; Setting Up Contribution on Our Master Page; The Contributor's Experience; Workflows; Workflow Designer Workflows and ListsDefining New Workflows; Summary; Chapter 6: Collecting Data; Data Sources; Creating Our XML Data Source; Creating a Data View; Adding and Deleting Records; InfoPath; Summary; Chapter 7: Displaying Data; Formatting the Data View; Direct Formatting; CSS Formatting; Conditional Formatting; Formatting Numbers; Filtering Data; Using Formulae; Sorting Data; Allowing Users to Sort the Data; Paging; Summary; Chapter 8: Adding Web Parts; What Are Web Parts?; Web Part Zones; Inserting a Web Part Zone; Inserting a Web Part; Adding Graphs; Summary; Chapter 9: Using ASP.NET Controls ASP.NET ControlsStandard Controls; Data Controls; Validation Controls; Navigation Controls; Login Controls; Adding a Simple Control; The Menu Control; The Calendar Control; Editing the web.config File; Validating Our Forms; Creating a Login Feature; Configuring SQL Server; Adding Our First User; Adding a New Virtual Server; Adding a Host Header; Adding an A Record; Extending the Virtual Server; Using Visual Studio's Web Site Administration Tool; Changing the Authentication Provider; Return to the web.config File; Additional Configuration Tweaks; Summary; Chapter 10: Integrating with Exchange Introduction to Outlook Web Access Web Parts |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910815078403321 |
Poole Mike | ||
Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., 2008 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
SOA cookbook [[electronic resource] ] : design recipes for building better SOA processes / / Michael Havey ; reviewers, Frank Jennings, Ravi Ravindra ; technical editors, Mithun Sehgal, Aanchal Kumar |
Autore | Havey Michael |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham, : Packt Publishing Ltd., c2008 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (268 p.) |
Disciplina | 004.65 |
Soggetto topico |
Web services
Computer network architectures Computer architecture Software architecture Application software - Development |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-62198-889-9
1-281-80562-9 9786611805623 1-84719-549-0 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: SOA Survival Guide; SOA from 184 Billion Feet; The Model Stack; The Secret They Couldn't Hide-SOA is Process-Oriented; Summary; Chapter 2: Drawing SOA Architecture; The 4+1 Structure of an SOA Architecture Document; Using ARIS Methodology to Organize the Logical View; Example-Competitive Enrollment; Data and Service Interfaces for Retailer Enrollment; BPMN Processes for Retailer Enrollment; Enrollment Process; Drop Process; Switch Process; ESB Processes; Traceability to Functional Requirements; Summary of BPMN Processes
Service Composition of Retailer Enrollment Using SCAOn Modeling Tools; Summary; Chapter 3: Separating BPM and SOA Processes; The Model Stack; A Reference Architecture; Vendor Offerings; Where Does BPEL Fit?; Design Tips on Separating BPM and SOA; Example-Process for Handling Credit Card Disputes; Disputes on the Model Stack; BPM-Oriented Disputes with TIBCO; Architecture; iProcess Business Processes; BusinessWorks Orchestration Processes; ActiveMatrix ESB Processes; SOA-Oriented Disputes with BEA; Architecture; Weblogic Integration Orchestration Process; About the Examples; Summary Chapter 4: Modeling Orchestration and ChoreographyChoreography versus Orchestration; Examples-Energy Enrollment, Email Bank Transfer; Modeling Choreography in BPMN; The Invisible Hub in BPEL; Choreography in WS-CDL with Pi4SOA; Defining Roles and Relationships; Building a Control Flow of Interactions; Generating a BPEL Role Process; Tips on Modeling Orchestration; Dependable Routing; About the Examples; Summary; Chapter 5: Short- and Long-Running Processes; Process Duration-the Long and Short of It; Stateful and Stateless Processes in BEA's Weblogic Integration; How to Keep Long-Running State State in Oracle's BPEL Process ManagerState in BEA's Weblogic Integration; Our Own State Model; Combining Short-Running Processes with State in TIBCO's BusinessWorks; Our Use Case-Sending Money by Email; The Router Process; The Request Process; The Transfer Process; The Cancellation Process; The Expiration Process; A Note on Implementation; Fast Short-Running BPEL; Uses of Short-Running Processes; Architecture for Short-Running Processes; Example of a Very Fast Process; Running the Very Fast Process on the Optimized Engine; Managing Inbound Events and Timeouts; Compiled Form Compiled Code-What Not To DoAbout the Examples; Summary; Chapter 6: Flat Form; Our Use Case: Credit Card Disputes; The Disputes Process as Requirements Flowchart; Disputes in BPEL-Naïve Form; Naïve BPEL; The Flatness of Naive Approach; Disputes in BPEL-Flat State Machine; Dispute State Diagram; State Diagram in BPEL; The Flatness of State Form; Disputes in BPEL: Flat Event Loop; The BPEL Event Loop; The Flatness of Event Form; Disputes in BPEL: Flat Control Flow; Arrow Surgery; Managing Flow in BPEL; The Flatness of Flow Form; Flat Concurrency; Long-Lived Concurrency How Not to Design the Voting Process |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910456352203321 |
Havey Michael | ||
Birmingham, : Packt Publishing Ltd., c2008 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
SOA governance [[electronic resource] ] : the key to successful SOA adoption in your organization / / Todd Biske |
Autore | Biske Todd |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., c2008 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (228 p.) |
Disciplina | 004.65 |
Soggetto topico |
Web services
Computer network architectures Computer architecture Software architecture Application software - Development Information technology - Management |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-281-85618-5
9786611856182 1-84719-587-3 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: The Essence of SOA Governance; What is Governance?; Desired Behavior; People; Policies; Process; What is IT Governance?; What is SOA?; Services in IT; What is SOA Governance?; People; Policies; Processes; Is All this Needed?; Summary; Chapter 2: Extending Project Governance for SOA; Beginning the SOA Journey; The First Milestone; The Second Milestone; The Opportunity; Beginning Your SOA Journey; Key Project Roles; The Service Contract; Adding SOA to Traditional Project Governance; Service Implementation Technologies
Service Communication TechnologiesWS-I Compliance; Security Credentials; Service Interface Specification; Using a Canonical Model; Web Services, POX over HTTP, and REST; Summary; Chapter 3: Avoiding a Bunch of Services; Undirected Service Creation; Effort One: Hot Potato; Effort Two: What Customer Service?; Effort Three: Where Did They Go?; The SOA Center of Excellence; Enterprise SOA Governance; Establishing Goals; Roles; Enterprise Architecture; Information Architecture; IT Management; Business Management; Developers; Analysts; Database Analysts (DBAs); Center of Excellence Engagement ModelDesign-Time Checkpoints; Analysis Checkpoint; Architecture Checkpoint; Design Checkpoint; Implementation Checkpoints; Operational Readiness Checkpoint; Service Portfolio Management; The Service Registry/Repository; Summary; Chapter 4: Service Versioning; Making a Change; The Chief Information Officer's Concern; The COE Tackles Service Versioning Policies; Service Versioning Policies; Explicit or Implicit Versioning; Extending the Service Contract; Policy-Driven Infrastructure; Applying Policy; Enterprise Service Bus; XML Appliances; Service Management Platforms Service Invocation and Exposure FrameworksConceptual View; Service Lifecycle Management; Monitoring; Management; Marketing; Summary; Chapter 5: Governing the Analysis Process; Building the Right Services; Analysis for SOA; Business Process Analysis; Business Capability Mapping; Business Capability Analysis; Project Inception Checkpoints; Summary; Chapter 6: Governing Run-Time Behavior; Preparing for Partner Services; The First Sign of Trouble; Day Two; Day Three; Day Four; Testing the Solution; Run-Time SOA Governance and the Service Contract; Ensuring Consistent Performance Metric CollectionPreventing Consumer Starvation; Defining Service Consumer Baselines; Defining Service Provider Baselines; Managing Run-time Usage; Detecting Potential Problems; Synthetic Transactions; Predictive Analysis; Service Management Technologies; Summary; Chapter 7: SOA Success; Celebrating Success; Changing Behavior; The Inherent Risk of Governance; Changing Governance Over Time; Summary; Chapter 8: Establishing SOA Governance at Your Organization; People; Solution Architect; Business Analyst; Technical Lead/Domain Architect; Enterprise Architect/Technology Architect Information Architect |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910455524503321 |
Biske Todd | ||
Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., c2008 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
SOA Patterns with BizTalk Server 2009 [[electronic resource] ] : implement SOA strategies for BizTalk Server solutions / / Richard Seroter |
Autore | Seroter Richard |
Edizione | [1st edition] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., c2009 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (400 p.) |
Disciplina | 004/.65 |
Collana | From technologies to solutions |
Soggetto topico |
Computer network architectures
Service-oriented architecture (Computer science) Software architecture |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-282-09408-4
9786612094088 1-84719-501-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Copyright; Credits; About the author; About the reviewers; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: Building BizTalk Server 2009 Applications; What is BizTalk Server?; BizTalk architecture; Setting up new BizTalk projects; What are BizTalk schemas?; Schema creation and characteristics; Property schemas; What are BizTalk maps?; Configuring BizTalk messaging; Working with BizTalk orchestration; Summary; Chapter 2: Windows Communication Foundation Primer; What is WCF?; Defining the contract; Service contracts; Data contracts; Implementing contracts in services
Throwing custom service faultsChoosing an endpoint address; The role of service bindings; Hosting services; Consuming WCF services; Non-WCF clients; WCF clients; Summary; Chapter 3: Using WCF Services in BizTalk Server 2009; Relationship between BizTalk and WCF; BizTalk WCF adapter; Exposing WCF services from orchestrations; Setting up the project; Generating the WCF endpoint; Configuring the Generated Components; Anatomy of a generated WCF WSDL; Exposing WCF services from schemas; Consuming WCF services from orchestrations; Consuming WCF services without orchestration; Summary Chapter 4: Planning Service-Oriented BizTalk SolutionsThe core principles of a service-oriented architecture; Loosely Coupled; How does this apply to BizTalk Server solutions?; Abstraction; How does this apply to BizTalk Server solutions?; Interoperable; How does this apply to BizTalk Server solutions?; Reusable; How does this apply to BizTalk Server solutions?; Identifying Standard Message Exchange Patterns; Request/Response services; One-way services; Request/Callback services; Publish/Subscribe services; Types of services; RPC services; Document services; Event services; Summary Chapter 5: Schema and Endpoint PatternsService-oriented schema patterns; Designing schemas based on service type; Canonical schemas; Building and applying reusable schema components; Node data type conversion for service clients; Node feature mapping for service clients; Element grouping; Element properties; Element restrictions; Exploiting generic schemas; Service-oriented endpoint patterns; Building reusable receive ports; Constructing a contract-first endpoint; Summary; Chapter 6: Asynchronous Communication Patterns; Why asynchronous communication matters Using asynchronous services in WCFCreating the synchronous service; Building a client-side asynchronous experience; Working with server-side asynchronous services; Using asynchronous services in BizTalk with WCF; Consuming asynchronous services; Exposing asynchronous services; Getting results from asynchronous invocations; Building WCF services that support client callbacks; BizTalk support for client callbacks; Using queues within asynchronous scenarios; Summary; Chapter 7: Orchestration Patterns; Why orchestration?; What is MessageBox direct binding?; Using dynamic service ports Defining the service |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910456618303321 |
Seroter Richard | ||
Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., c2009 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
SOA Patterns with BizTalk Server 2009 [[electronic resource] ] : implement SOA strategies for BizTalk Server solutions / / Richard Seroter |
Autore | Seroter Richard |
Edizione | [1st edition] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., c2009 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (400 p.) |
Disciplina | 004/.65 |
Collana | From technologies to solutions |
Soggetto topico |
Computer network architectures
Service-oriented architecture (Computer science) Software architecture |
ISBN |
1-282-09408-4
9786612094088 1-84719-501-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Copyright; Credits; About the author; About the reviewers; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: Building BizTalk Server 2009 Applications; What is BizTalk Server?; BizTalk architecture; Setting up new BizTalk projects; What are BizTalk schemas?; Schema creation and characteristics; Property schemas; What are BizTalk maps?; Configuring BizTalk messaging; Working with BizTalk orchestration; Summary; Chapter 2: Windows Communication Foundation Primer; What is WCF?; Defining the contract; Service contracts; Data contracts; Implementing contracts in services
Throwing custom service faultsChoosing an endpoint address; The role of service bindings; Hosting services; Consuming WCF services; Non-WCF clients; WCF clients; Summary; Chapter 3: Using WCF Services in BizTalk Server 2009; Relationship between BizTalk and WCF; BizTalk WCF adapter; Exposing WCF services from orchestrations; Setting up the project; Generating the WCF endpoint; Configuring the Generated Components; Anatomy of a generated WCF WSDL; Exposing WCF services from schemas; Consuming WCF services from orchestrations; Consuming WCF services without orchestration; Summary Chapter 4: Planning Service-Oriented BizTalk SolutionsThe core principles of a service-oriented architecture; Loosely Coupled; How does this apply to BizTalk Server solutions?; Abstraction; How does this apply to BizTalk Server solutions?; Interoperable; How does this apply to BizTalk Server solutions?; Reusable; How does this apply to BizTalk Server solutions?; Identifying Standard Message Exchange Patterns; Request/Response services; One-way services; Request/Callback services; Publish/Subscribe services; Types of services; RPC services; Document services; Event services; Summary Chapter 5: Schema and Endpoint PatternsService-oriented schema patterns; Designing schemas based on service type; Canonical schemas; Building and applying reusable schema components; Node data type conversion for service clients; Node feature mapping for service clients; Element grouping; Element properties; Element restrictions; Exploiting generic schemas; Service-oriented endpoint patterns; Building reusable receive ports; Constructing a contract-first endpoint; Summary; Chapter 6: Asynchronous Communication Patterns; Why asynchronous communication matters Using asynchronous services in WCFCreating the synchronous service; Building a client-side asynchronous experience; Working with server-side asynchronous services; Using asynchronous services in BizTalk with WCF; Consuming asynchronous services; Exposing asynchronous services; Getting results from asynchronous invocations; Building WCF services that support client callbacks; BizTalk support for client callbacks; Using queues within asynchronous scenarios; Summary; Chapter 7: Orchestration Patterns; Why orchestration?; What is MessageBox direct binding?; Using dynamic service ports Defining the service |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910780782703321 |
Seroter Richard | ||
Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., c2009 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
SOA Patterns with BizTalk Server 2009 : implement SOA strategies for BizTalk Server solutions / / Richard Seroter |
Autore | Seroter Richard |
Edizione | [1st edition] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., c2009 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (400 p.) |
Disciplina | 004/.65 |
Collana | From technologies to solutions |
Soggetto topico |
Computer network architectures
Service-oriented architecture (Computer science) Software architecture |
ISBN |
1-282-09408-4
9786612094088 1-84719-501-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Copyright; Credits; About the author; About the reviewers; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: Building BizTalk Server 2009 Applications; What is BizTalk Server?; BizTalk architecture; Setting up new BizTalk projects; What are BizTalk schemas?; Schema creation and characteristics; Property schemas; What are BizTalk maps?; Configuring BizTalk messaging; Working with BizTalk orchestration; Summary; Chapter 2: Windows Communication Foundation Primer; What is WCF?; Defining the contract; Service contracts; Data contracts; Implementing contracts in services
Throwing custom service faultsChoosing an endpoint address; The role of service bindings; Hosting services; Consuming WCF services; Non-WCF clients; WCF clients; Summary; Chapter 3: Using WCF Services in BizTalk Server 2009; Relationship between BizTalk and WCF; BizTalk WCF adapter; Exposing WCF services from orchestrations; Setting up the project; Generating the WCF endpoint; Configuring the Generated Components; Anatomy of a generated WCF WSDL; Exposing WCF services from schemas; Consuming WCF services from orchestrations; Consuming WCF services without orchestration; Summary Chapter 4: Planning Service-Oriented BizTalk SolutionsThe core principles of a service-oriented architecture; Loosely Coupled; How does this apply to BizTalk Server solutions?; Abstraction; How does this apply to BizTalk Server solutions?; Interoperable; How does this apply to BizTalk Server solutions?; Reusable; How does this apply to BizTalk Server solutions?; Identifying Standard Message Exchange Patterns; Request/Response services; One-way services; Request/Callback services; Publish/Subscribe services; Types of services; RPC services; Document services; Event services; Summary Chapter 5: Schema and Endpoint PatternsService-oriented schema patterns; Designing schemas based on service type; Canonical schemas; Building and applying reusable schema components; Node data type conversion for service clients; Node feature mapping for service clients; Element grouping; Element properties; Element restrictions; Exploiting generic schemas; Service-oriented endpoint patterns; Building reusable receive ports; Constructing a contract-first endpoint; Summary; Chapter 6: Asynchronous Communication Patterns; Why asynchronous communication matters Using asynchronous services in WCFCreating the synchronous service; Building a client-side asynchronous experience; Working with server-side asynchronous services; Using asynchronous services in BizTalk with WCF; Consuming asynchronous services; Exposing asynchronous services; Getting results from asynchronous invocations; Building WCF services that support client callbacks; BizTalk support for client callbacks; Using queues within asynchronous scenarios; Summary; Chapter 7: Orchestration Patterns; Why orchestration?; What is MessageBox direct binding?; Using dynamic service ports Defining the service |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910813293803321 |
Seroter Richard | ||
Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., c2009 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Swing extreme testing [[electronic resource] ] : the extreme approach to complete Java application testing / / Tim Lavers, Lindsay Peters |
Autore | Lavers Tim |
Edizione | [1st edition] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., 2008 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (328 p.) |
Disciplina | 005.1/4 |
Altri autori (Persone) | PetersLindsay |
Collana | From technologies to solutions |
Soggetto topico |
Computer software - Testing
eXtreme programming Java (Computer program language) |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN | 1-84719-483-4 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: What Needs Testing?; An Example; What Classes Do We Test?; Test First-Always!; What Classes Don't We Test?; What Methods Need Testing?; What Methods Don't We Test?; Invoking Hidden Methods and Constructors; Unit Test Coverage; Who Should Implement the Unit Tests?; What About Legacy Code?; Where Does Integration Testing Fit In?; Documentation of Unit Tests; Testing at the Application Level; Who Should Implement the Function Tests?; Automated Test Execution; A Hierarchy of Tests; What Language Should Our Tests Be In?; Is it Really Possible?; Summary
Chapter 2: Basics of Unit TestingA Simple Example; The Default Implementation; Test Cases; Design by Contract and Non-Defensive Programming; Test Code Example; Bootstrapping Our Implementation; Load Testing; Summary; Chapter 3: Infrastructure for Testing; Where Should the Unit Tests Go?; Where Should the Function and Load Tests Go?; Management of Test Data; What Do We Require of a Test Data Management System?; Temporary Files; Summary; Chapter 4: Cyborg-a Better Robot; The Design of Cyborg; Using the Keyboard; Mousing Around; Checking the Screen; Summary Chapter 5: Managing and Testing User MessagesSome Problems with Resource Bundles; A Solution; The UserStrings Class; ResourcesTester; How ResourcesTester Works; Getting More from UserStrings; Summary; Chapter 6: Making Classes Testable with Interfaces; The LabWizard Comment Editor; The Wizard; A Test for Wizard; A Test for Step; Handlers in LabWizard; Summary; Chapter 7: Exercising UI Components in Tests; The LabWizard Login Screen; The Design of LoginScreen; UI Wrappers; The Correct Implementation of UILoginScreen; A Handler Implementation for Unit Testing; Setting Up our Tests Our First TestFurther Tests; Some Implicit Tests; Other User Interfaces; Summary; Chapter 8: Showing, Finding, and Reading Swing Components; Setting Up User Interface Components in a Thread-Safe Manner; Finding a Component; Testing Whether a Message is Showing; Searching for Components by Name; Reading the State of a Component; Case Study: Testing Whether an Action Can Be Cancelled; The Official Word on Swing Threading; Summary; Chapter 9: Case Study: Testing a 'Save as' Dialog; The Ikon Do It 'Save as' Dialog; Outline of the Unit Test; UI Helper Methods; Dialogs Getting the Text of a Text FieldFrame Disposal; Unit Test Infrastructure; The UISaveAsDialog Class; The ShowerThread Class; The init() Method; The cleanup() Method; The Unit Tests; The Constructor Test; The wasCancelled() Test; The name() Test; The show() Test; The Data Validation Test; The Usability Test; Summary; Chapter 10: More Techniques for Testing Swing Components; Testing with JColorChooser; Using JFileChooser; Checking that a JFileChooser has been Set Up Correctly; Testing the Appearance of a JComponent; Testing with Frames; Frame Location; Frame Size; Testing with Lists List Selection Methods |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910456617703321 |
Lavers Tim | ||
Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., 2008 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
WordPress 2.7 cookbook [[electronic resource] /] / Jean-Baptiste Jung |
Autore | Jung Jean-Baptiste |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., c2009 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (316 pages) |
Disciplina | 006.7 |
Soggetto topico |
Blogs - Design
Blogs Web sites - Design |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
9786612238161
1-282-23816-7 1-84719-739-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: Getting Ready to Cook with WordPress; Using built-in WordPress tools; Managing media files with the Media Library; Getting ready; How to do it; Deleting media; Bulk media deletion; How it works; Live editing themes with the built-in Theme Editor; Getting ready; How to do it; How it works; There's more...; Editing plugins with the WordPress; built-in Plugin Editor; Getting ready; How to do it; How it works; There's more...; Managing authors and users with; the User Manager; Getting ready; How to do it; Deleting users; Editing user details
How it work Importing and exporting content with the; Import and Export tool; Getting ready; How to do it; Importing content; Exporting content; How it works; Chapter 2: Finding, Installing, and Teaking Themes; Installing a theme; Getting ready; How to do it; There's more...; Classic themes; Advanced themes; Premium themes; Lists of themes; Important notes about themes; Chapter 3: Get the Most Out of Your WordPress Theme; Modifying your theme colors; Getting ready; How to do it; How it works; There's more...; Modifying your theme fonts; Getting ready; How to do it; There's more... Tips and things to know about fonts Creating and integrating a favicon; Getting ready; Favicon format; How to do it; How it works; Integrating your own logo; Getting ready; How to do it; How it works; There's more...; Adding a link to the homepage; Adding social bookmarking buttons to your theme; Getting ready; How to do it; How it works; There's more...; Using CSS to style the social bookmarking widget; Adding Del.icio.us live count; Code explanation; Integrating feed burner feeds on your theme; How to do it; How it works; Integrating Twitter on your theme using the; Twitter Tools plug in Getting ready How to do it; How it works; Displaying your Twitter entries on your blog,; using a page template; Getting ready; How to do it; How it works; Customizing WordPress admin login page; Plugin versus hack; How to do it; How it works; Using conditional tags to display content on; specific pages; Getting ready; How to do it; How it works?; There's more...; Special parameters; Using page templates in your theme; Getting ready; How to do it; How it works; Creating an archive page; Getting ready; How to do it; How it works; There's more...; Creating a custom 404 error page; Getting ready How to do it How it works; There's more...; Using a static page as a homepage; Getting ready; How to do it; How it works; There's more...; Creating a Featured Posts block on; your homepage; Getting ready; How to do it; How it works; There's more...; Making your new posts stands out with a; custom style; Getting ready; How to do it; How it works; There's more...; Chapter 4: Doing Anything with Plugins and Widgets; Installing plugins; Getting ready; How to do it; How it works; Getting rid of comment spams with Akismet; Getting ready; How to do it; How it works Backing up your database with WP Database |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910457139903321 |
Jung Jean-Baptiste | ||
Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., c2009 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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