Summary
In this chapter, you took an in-depth look at the two most important web service protocols: SOAP and WSDL. SOAP is an incredibly lightweight protocol for messaging. WSDL is a flexible, extensible protocol for describing web services. Together, they ensure that web services can be created and consumed on virtually any programming platform for years to come. This chapter also discussed in detail how you can tailor the XML returned by your web service.
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© 2006 Laurence Moroney, Matthew MacDonald (Ed.), K. Scott Allen, James Avery, Russ Basiura, Mike Batongbacal, Marco Bellinaso, Matt Butler, Andreas Eide, Daniel Cazzulino, Michael Clark, Richard Conway, Robert Eisenberg, Brady Gaster, James Greenwood, Kevin Hoffman, Erik Johansson, Angelo Kastroulis, Dan Kent, Sitaraman Lakshminarayanan, Don Lee, Christopher Miller, Matt Milner, Jan Narkiewicz, Matt Odhner, Ryan O’Keefe, Andrew Reid, Matthew Reynolds, Enrico Sabbadin, Bill Sempf, Doug Seven, Srinivasa Sivkumar, Thiru Thangarathinam, Doug Thews
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(2006). Web Service Standards and Extensions. In: Moroney, L., MacDonald, M. (eds) Pro ASP.NET 2.0 in VB 2005. Apress. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4302-0118-2_33
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4302-0118-2_33
Publisher Name: Apress
Print ISBN: 978-1-59059-563-3
Online ISBN: 978-1-4302-0118-2
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