REST in Practice: Hypermedia and Systems Architecture. Ian Robinson, Jim Webber, Savas Parastatidis

REST in Practice: Hypermedia and Systems Architecture


REST.in.Practice.Hypermedia.and.Systems.Architecture.pdf
ISBN: 0596805829,9780596805821 | 448 pages | 12 Mb


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REST in Practice: Hypermedia and Systems Architecture Ian Robinson, Jim Webber, Savas Parastatidis
Publisher: O'Reilly Media




Wednesday, 24 April 2013 at 02:29. Note: We believe Atom is an ideal format for highly scalable event-driven architectures. Rest-in-practice-hypermedia-and-systems-architecture. A book to read is REST in Practice: Hypermedia and Systems Architecture. Why don't typical enterprise projects go as smoothly as projects you develop for the Web? The goal throughout is to describe how to build distributed systems based on the Web's architecture. REST in Practice: Hypermedia and Systems Architecture book download. Atom is an XML-based hypermedia format for representing timestamped lists of web content and metadata such as blog postings and news articles. The following excerpt from REST in Practice shows you how to use Atom to implement an event-driven system. Why really don't standard enterprise jobs go as efficiently as tasks you create for the Web? Download REST in Practice: Hypermedia and Systems Architecture . In this book Jim Webber, Savas Parastatidis, and Ian Robinson provide an explanation of REST and show how you can develop distributed hypermedia. Does the REST architectural style really present a viable alternative for building distributed systems and enterprise-class applications? If you we look behind the web we see that the architecture of the web is nothing more than thousands of simple, small-scale interactions between agents and resources that use the founding technologies of HTTP and the URI. The following excerpt from REST in such as blog postings and news articles. Test-Driven REST From the author of REST in Practice: Hypermedia and Systems Architecture. REST in Practice: Hypermedia and Systems Architecture Why don't typical enterprise projects go as smoothly as projects you develop for the Web?