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https://github.com/spajus/xmlzen
Automatically exported from code.google.com/p/xmlzen
https://github.com/spajus/xmlzen
Last synced: 7 days ago
JSON representation
Automatically exported from code.google.com/p/xmlzen
- Host: GitHub
- URL: https://github.com/spajus/xmlzen
- Owner: spajus
- License: other
- Created: 2015-03-14T10:56:37.000Z (almost 10 years ago)
- Default Branch: master
- Last Pushed: 2015-03-14T11:16:52.000Z (almost 10 years ago)
- Last Synced: 2024-12-11T17:29:08.142Z (about 1 month ago)
- Language: HTML
- Size: 289 KB
- Stars: 0
- Watchers: 2
- Forks: 0
- Open Issues: 3
-
Metadata Files:
- Readme: README
- Changelog: CHANGELOG
- License: LICENSE
Awesome Lists containing this project
README
$Id$
=============
XMLZEN README
=============
http://xmlzen.googlecode.com============
XML and Java
============Java is currently one of the most used server side programming languages, and
casual java development usually involves lot's of XML processing. There are huge
APIs with solid implementations that have been there for decades, and yet, all
these implementations are still causing problems. What is the API good for, if
things that run on one implementation usually does not work with another? Why
can a switch from Java 5 to Java 6 break XML parsers and processors? It should
be different.============
Less is More
============
In many cases you will only need basic features for processing XML files, and in
such cases there is no need to choke on huge APIs and implementations that
support all the gore displayed above. By using bloatware you create new
bloatware. Find the inspiration in minimalism, try XML Zen.================
Building XML Zen
================
You should use Maven to build XML Zen. Simply execute:
mvn package
The artifact (xmlzen-X.X.X.jar) will be generated in target/ folder