Javascript Annotated Archives

Download Javascript Annotated Archives PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Javascript Annotated Archives book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.
JavaScript Annotated Archives

Like no other book before, "JavaScript Annotated Archives" gives you the best in expert advice on how, when and why you should implement examples from a powerful collection of ready-to-use code into your Web pages. These helpful annotations are provided by three JavaScript programming experts, including PC Week's "Jeff's Internet Adventures" columnist, Jeff Frentzen. They'll teach you numerous customization tips and techniques that can be applied to the book's JavaScript code examples for use in your own projects. Included with the book is a useful CD-ROM containing all the book's source code as well as Web pages that demonstrate each script. Add these Web pages immediately to your site or customize them using the expert annotations.
Python Annotated Archives

Expert annotations show when and how to customize Python code examples to fit individual development needs. Brown covers data manipulation, networking, Web and interface development, graphics, e-mail and more. The bonus CD-ROM contains all code from the book, saving readers hundreds of programming hours.
Metadata Standards and Web Services in Libraries, Archives, and Museums

Author: Erik Mitchell
language: en
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Release Date: 2015-10-21
Metadata in library information environments is evolving rapidly. This book provides readers with a set of tools for designing, developing, and implementing metadata-rich information systems while also examining the challenges and opportunities in this field. As the world of library and information science has developed in the age of digital information, metadata and metadata-rich information systems have become increasingly important—and more complex and confusing. This book will enable students, instructors, and practitioners in the information science field to understand how these new systems and standards will impact their careers and professions. Author Erik Mitchell explores definitions of information and presents an up-to-date consideration of user needs in information systems to provide necessary background before moving on to in-depth discussions of metadata, information organization practice, and information system design. Each chapter incorporates hands-on activities to complement the reading material, allowing readers to build technical skills alongside the important conceptual learning in this content area. Readers will gain conceptual understanding and skills that will allow them to analyze and transform structured data, develop metadata-rich information systems, and design systems with user needs and digital literacies in mind. This book is intended for library and information science students taking information organization, metadata, or other core "digital cataloging" classes, but will also be highly useful for professionals seeking to learn the details of metadata systems and theory using a hands-on approach.