Water Languages Programming
Water Languages Programming
Water
Water is a new object-oriented, prototype-based, multiparadigm, native Web services programming language that allows programming in XML syntax. It is an open language designed to simplify creating new Web services. It is very flexible and adheres to a "Learn Once, Use Everywhere" philosophy where data, logic, and presentation have a uniform representation.
Top: Computers: Programming: Languages: Water
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Editor's Picks:
- All-purpose Web services language, platform: prototype-based, BASIC easy, LISP powerful, OO XML, ConciseXML syntax, OO Capability security. Descriptions, documents, news, events, articles, comparisons, services, products, book, community. [free trial vers
- Two-year-old Massachusetts start-up Clear Methods Inc. says Web services are having trouble getting off the ground due to XML, one of the keys web services are supposed to be based on. With forum comments. [Linux Business Week]
- By Mike Plusch; John Wiley & Sons, 2002, ISBN 0764525360. In-depth introductory guide, hands-on tutorials, over 1,000 examples include source code, output; organized in 6 parts; author is Water co-creator. [Amazon.com]
- Agencies that move to Web services and XML with no thorough understanding are building a house of cards. The Steam run-time engine and Water radically simplify XML; its core statements fit on 3 pages. [Government Computer News]
- Mail list archive.
- Sells Steam IDE, interactive development environment, a Water runtime engine, and development environment with tools, including powerful expression stepper. [Commercial]
- New England Water Language user group. Water originates in the Boston-Cambridge-MIT area.
- Startup called Clear Methods has produced Water XML programming language, and a run-time environment for its code, called Steam Engine, being offered as part of 'pure Web-services platform.' [InformationWeek]
- Clear Methods says XML programming must be simplified, so it created Water, a general-purpose language that can replace the many languages programmers need to master to produce Web services. [CNET News.com]
- First such event, one page announcement of place (MIT), time. To become full website.
- For practicing developers: event announcements (user group meetings, workshops, conferences), book link.
- Open language-independent markup syntax compatible with XML 1.0, but handles all data types: non-hierarchial, program logic, document markup, binary. Concise and precise to eliminate 2 major limits of XML, extends its use.
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