Cocoon 2 Programming: Web Publishing with XML and Java (Transcend Technique)
Cocoon 2 Programming: Web Publishing with XML and Java (Transcend Technique) by Bill Brogden, Conrad DCruz and Mark Gaither
- Binding:
- Paperback
- Number of Pages:
- 352
- ISBN:
- 0782141315
- Product Group:
- book
- Publisher:
- John Wiley & Sons
- Publication Date:
- Oct. 18, 2002
- BooksForGeeks.com ID:
- 2636
Reviews for Cocoon 2 Programming: Web Publishing with XML and Java (Transcend Technique)
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Desperately seeking an editor
Rated out of 5 stars, February 12st, 2003
What the authors of this book desperately needed was an editor. This book is a mess. There is no sense of flow. There is no attempt by the authors to explain a topic and then delve further into it building upon what they show us. Instead we get detail. We are told Cocoon is made up of these frameworks and these frameworks use these design patterns and are made up of these pieces which are made up of these pieces. And in the end we know no more than when we started. We are told Cocoon contains these Java classes and are given a sentence explaining each one. We are given lists of SAX classes with no clear explanation of why we should be interested. There are lots of tables and lists and charts that explain nothing. The book never gives a clear explanation of what Cocoon does or how Java fits into Cocoon. The chapter on LogicSheets is a perfect example. There are thirty three tables in this chapter going page after page with no clear explanation of what the tables mean. Then the example at the end of the chapter is so trivial as to be meaningless. In fact, the examples throughout the book are much too simplistic and don't demonstrate the power of Cocoon. There is no question that an enormous amount of research went into this book. It's a shame that the authors weren't able to present that research in a useful way.

