In the US, computer code is broadly characterized as a literary work, and as such can be protected by copyright.
A good way to write an introduction to WSDL tutorials is begin by explaining what WSDL stands for. Giving a brief explanation of what will be included in the tutorial is also a good way to introduce the subject matter.
buttom up is first create class, generate methods and create a wsdl from this, top down is first create wsdl and than generate codes depend on this wsdl
Father Alexey, now Hiero Schema Monk Ambrose, does.
Top down approach requires you to write your own WSDL and XSDs and then create service which follows that WSDL and XSDs. In bottom up approach you first write service code and then WSDL and XSDs. In MS world bottom up is very easy because WSDL and XSDs are generated for you by tools. The first approach is much harder because it has lesser support in tools and because developers are usually not skilled enough to write WSDL (especially with WS-Policies).
A starflake schema is a combination of a star schema and a snowflake schema. Starflake schemas are snowflake schemas where only some of the dimension tables have been denormalized. hardkingofflirt@gmail.com
WSDL
The schema is the physical arrangement of the data as it appears in the DBMS. The subschema is the logical view of the data as it appears to the application program.
XML (eXtensible Markup Language) is a set of rules for encoding documents. The rules could describe anything from the rules of HTML to various file formats. WSDL (Web Services Description Language) provides a model for describing web services. WSDL uses the XML to specify its rules.
Neil Boorstyn has written: 'Copyright Law With Copyright Law Cumulative Supplement' 'Boorstyn on copyright' -- subject(s): Copyright
Thorvald Solberg has written: 'Copyright bibliography' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Copyright 'Foreign Copyright Laws: A List of the Foreign Copyright Laws Now in Force ..' 'The present international copyright situation' -- subject(s): Bern copyright convention (1886), Copyright, International Copyright, Revisions, 1928, Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works 'Copyright in Congress, 1789-1904'
Laura N. Gasaway has written: 'Get copyright right' -- subject(s): Copyright, Copyright and electronic data processing, Fair use (Copyright), United States 'Legal protection for computer programs' -- subject(s): Copyright, Computer programs
Information itself is not subject to copyright. Only a creative work of authorship is protected by copyright.