CARVIEW |
The un-queried life is not worth living
— Socrates (Plato, The Apology, 38a)
W3C XML Query (XQuery)
30,000 Foot View
XQuery: 30,000 foot view (CIO, CTO, Journalist)
XQuery is a standardized language for combining documents, databases, Web pages and almost anything else. It is very widely implemented. It is powerful and easy to learn.
XQuery is replacing proprietary middleware languages and Web Application development languages. XQuery is replacing complex Java or C++ programs with a few lines of code. XQuery is simpler to work with and easier to maintain than many other alternatives.
Do more with less.
Contents
Architects
XQuery for the systems analyst or architect
The W3C XML Query Working Group worked with the W3C XML Schema Working Group and the W3C XSL Working Group to make a set of specifications that all work together.
Use XQuery to take data from multiple databases, from XML files, from remote Web documents, even from CGI scripts, and to produce XML results that you can process with XSLT.
Use XQuery on the back-end of a Web server, or to generate Enterprise-wide executive reports.
Examples of XML Query In Action
Submit your entry by sending mail to liam at w3.org, with [XQuery site] in the subject. Remember to give the full URL, and remember that it must be public.
Oxford African American Studies Center is a site published by Oxford University Press using an XQuery system. See the Site Credits link there for more details.
Alberta learning Center for education in the Canadian province of Alberta; e.g. see the Search link, which does not require registration.
AuthorMapper shows authors of scientific papers and articles broken down by geography and subject. The site is by Springer.
Business Week Business School Comparator is said to use XQuery to let users compare universities and business schools; it didn't seem to work for me, so maybe IE only? Or maybe I'm not cut out for business.
Business Exchange, another Business Week site, uses XQuery to drive a site where, it says, usiness professionals can collaborate and network around business topics.
CQ Legislative Impact is a tool to explore how pending US legislation might affect existing laws.
Data Request Broker, DRB, at Gael Consultant, is an open source Java API for processing heterogeneous data. It includes XQuery and Scema support. License is LGPL.
The Dolley Madison Digital Edition by the University of Virginia Press.
fromoldbooks.org has an image search engine powered by XML Query; you can see the text of the queries (follow the About link on the Search page). This is also used by Liam Quin's Photograph search page.
MarkMail is an XQuery-based application for searching and visualising mailing lists.
The New England Journal of Medicine uses XQuery to search and retrieve comprehensive case summaries and graphical icons that identify available supplemental content such as lab reports, radiological scans, histopathology slides, and photos associated with a particular case record.
O'Reilly Labs use XQuery to power code search, image search, statistics and more.
Pop Culture Universe is a Web site about American popular culture, including movies, books and music, with over 300 publications indexed and searchable.
Springer Images uses XQuery to search and retrieve scientific images, photos, tables, charts etc. for researchers.
Springer Exemplar provides a full-text interface to large numbers of scientific and technical journals, together with tools for narrowing down search results.
Wiley Custom Select is a Web site for creating custom course books.
Worldcolor has a custom publishing system using XQuery; they have a Flash demo.
Have you got a Web site that's powered by XML Query? A success story to share? Contact liam at w3.org.
Users
XQuery: choosing an implementation
There are over 40 different software packages that support XML Query in some way. Things to look for include availability of support, platforms, price, performance, all the usual issues, but you should also ask whether the software supports the final syntax from the W3C Recommendation or implements an earlier draft. Another XML Query specific feature is support for XML files, for fetching documents via HTTP, and for connecting to relational (or other) data sources: that is, whether the package lives up to the XML Query promise of unifying access to many different forms of information.
List of XQuery Implementations
Learning
There are some books listed; there are also people offering training and tutorials. If there is anything you found particular helpful, let us know!
There are also some mailing lists devoted to XML and to XML Query. You should look at the archives of each list before posting; you'll also need to subscribe to the list before you can post to it in most cases.
- www-ql
This is the W3C public mailing list on query languages, including (but not limited to) discussion on the XML Query project. Do not use this to send comments on the specification, such as errata or feature requests; see the Status section in each specification for instructions on how to send comments to the Working Group.
- xquery-talk
A mailing list hosted at x-query.com, especially for discussing XQuery.
- xml-dev
Probably the most widely-known list for discussing XML.
Reading the Specs
W3C Specifications are aimed first and foremost at programmers writing implementations of them. We also try to make them readable for people trying to learn the language—but given a choice between making a standard precise and making it easy to read, we have to make it precise.
If you are fairly technical, you could start by reading the XML Query specification, and the XQuery Use Cases document has some examples. Many people would rather look for a book or tutorial.
Implementers
XQuery for the implementer: hard core query
Implementers: what would you most like to see here? What would have helped you the most?
The XQuery Test Suite
W3C test suites exist to show that specifications can be implemented. They are testing the specs, not the code!
The QT 3.0 Test suite is for people implementing XQuery 3, XPath 3, Functions and Operators 3 and related specifications.
XQuery and XPath Full Text 1.0 Test Suite (Joint with the XSLT WG)
The much older XQuery 1.0 Test Suite is no longer used.
Static Typing and Formal Semantics
XPath 2 has typed values; that is, the language associates a value type with each expression, variable or function. The set of possible types is that defined by W3C XML Schema, augmented by user-defined types derived from those basic Schema types using an external schema. The way in which an XPath or XQuery system derives and checks the type of an expression is defined formally, using a mathematical notation, in the XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Formal Semantics Recommendation.
Note that both external W3C Schema support and static typing are optional features, so not all implementations support them.
Conformance Statements
You will often see things in the specifications marked as being implementation defined. You must document what your implementation does for each of these.
Documents
Specifications and Working Group Notes
The W3C XML Query Working Group has published a lot of documents. Many of these were done together with the XSL Working Group and are marked Joint.
Both of these Working Groups also met with the W3C XML Schema Working Group, to make sure our specifications all work together.
First, the main XML Query documents:
XQuery 3.1: An XML Query Language (W3C Recommendation)
XML Syntax for XQuery 3.1 (XQueryX) (W3C Recommendation)
XML Query (XQuery) 3.1 Requirements (W3C Working Group Note)
XML Query 3.0 Use Cases (W3C Working Group Note)
Building a Tokenizer for XPath or XQuery (Joint Note)
XSLT and XQuery share a lot of the same functionality:
XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 2.0 (by the XSL Working Group)
XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 3.0 (by the XSL Working Group)
XQuery and XSLT both use XPath:
XML Path Language (XPath) 3.1 (W3C Recommendation; Joint)
XPath in turn is built on a number of Joint specifications :
XQuery and XPath Data Model (W3C Recommendation; Joint)
XSLT and XQuery Serialization (W3C Recommendation; Joint)
XQuery and XPath Functions and Operators (W3C Recommendation; Joint)
The XML Query and XSL Working Groups developed Full-Text Search for XPath and XQuery:
The XML Query Working Group developed an update facility for XQuery; this lets you write Query expressions that change documents and perhaps save the result.
The XML Query Working Group is no longer working on Scripting Extensions for XQuery. The goal was to investigate whether adding imperative (procedural) features such as variable assigment and explicit sequencing to XQuery makes the language significantly more powerful or easier to use.
News
Recently added...
Send your XQuery-related news item to liam@w3.org, with [XQuery] in the Subject. Note, I am sorry that sometimes I miss announcements. I get hundreds, sometimes thousands, of messages in a day. If your announcement does not appear within one week, send it again and please accept my apologies!
Subscribe to the RSS feed.
XQuery 3.0, XPath 3.0 and supporting specs now W3C Recommendations
XQuery 3.0 is a W3C Recommendation along with XQueryX, XPath 3, XDM 3, Serialization 3 and of course functions and Operators 3.
BaseX 7.8 Released
BaseX 7.8 was released today; it adds a project view, enhancements to the built-in editor, speedups to insert, delete, XQuery functions and more, and includes enhancements to the the XQuery add-on modules such as JSON , Full-Texxt and ExPath File. The software is also now available in Russian and Spanish.
XMLSpy 2014
Altova has released XML Spy 2014 with support for XQuery 3.0, XPath 3.0, XSLT 3.0 draft and also XML Schema 1.1 using the RaptorXML engine.
Apache Lux
Lux release 0.11; includes moving to Saxon 9.5, Solr 4.4, experimental SolrCloud support.
BaseX 7.7 Released
BaseX 7.7 was released today; it includes support for the XQuery 3.0 Candidate Recommendation, many new features and performance enhancements, improved support for large databases, and a birthday cake for Leo.
Zorba 2.9 released
Zorba 2.9 was released today; Zorba is an open source XQuery implementation in C++ that also includes a JSONiq implementation. This release increases XQuery 3 support (including higher order functions) and also makes changes to the JSONiq implementation.
Xidel HTML/XML data extraction tool 0.7
Xidel is a tool for extracting data from Web pages using a combination of CSS selectors, XQuery and JSONiq. [since renamed to Xidel]
W3C Java Applets updated
W3C Java Applets have been updated to incorporate the latest versions of the specifications for the XPath and XQuery 3.0 Candidate Recommendations as well as for the 1.0 and 2.0 documents.
W3C Recommendations!
W3C Recommendation Status for XQuery 1.0: An XML Query Language, XML Syntax for XQuery 1.0 (XQueryX) and XML Path Language (XPath) 2.0, as well as the supporting specifications, XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Functions and Operators, XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Data Model (XDM), XSLT 2.0 and XQuery 1.0 Serialization and of course XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Formal Semantics. In addition, XSL Transformations (XSLT) Version 2.0 by the XSL Working Group is also a W3C Recommendation.
oXygen Editor 8.0
oXygen editor 8.0 includes debugging support for both XML Query and XSLT, with support for Berkeley XML DB, IBM DB2 Pure XML, eXist XML Database, MarkLogic, Microsoft SQLServer 2005, Oracle 10g R2, RainingData TigerLogic XDMS, SoftwareAG Tamino and XHive XML Database.
Patent Disclosures
The XML Query Working Group operates under the Royalty Free terms of the W3C Patent policy. Patent disclosures relevant to the specifications produced by the XML Query working group can be found in the Implementation of the W3C Patent Policy (IPP) XML Query IPP status page and, for XSL and joint specifications the XSL WG IPP status page. Older disclosures are on the XML Query Working Group's patent disclosure page at https://www.w3.org/2002/08/xmlquery-IPR-statements.
Specifications that are joint work with the XSL working group have also the additional patent disclosures provided by the XSL wg at https://www.w3.org/Style/XSL/Disclosures.
Discussion/Feedback:
- Email: use member-query-feedback@w3.org to comment/suggest new content for this page, or if for some reasons you need to directly contact the W3C XQuery responsibles; otherwise, please use the mailing lists listed below
- Mailing lists:
- www-ql@w3.org
- The public mailing list on query languages, including (but not limited to) discussion on the XML Query project. This list originated from the QL'98 w3c-ql@w3.org mailing list, and has now become a public list (see the migration announcement). Only subscribed users can post to this list. Subscription is open to everybody: to subscribe or unsubscribe just send a message to www-ql-request@w3.org with your request. The list is publicly archived at https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-ql/.
- public-qt-comments@w3.org
Note: before posting to this mailing list, be sure to read the Status section in the document on which you are commenting. Most of our documents now ask you to send comments using bugzilla.
This public mailing list is used to submit comments on the publications of the XML Query and XSL working groups. This is not a discussion list (use www-ql@w3.org instead), and so you shouldn't subscribe: this list is just a way for people to provide their comments to the XML Query and XSL WGs, and for the WGs to reply. The list is publicly archived at https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-qt-comments/.
Implementations
XML Query Implementations
If your implementation is not here, or if you know of an implementation that is not listed, send liam@w3.org the details!
Software that implements the XQuery and XPath Full Text Facility is so marked in this list. There is a separate list of XPath 2 implementations.
- The W3C XPath and XQuery Grammar Test Page features Java applets that read expressions and show the resulting parse tree.
- Abacus Systems'
Relational XQuery
supports both relational data (via JDBC) and other sources
including XML files, and
also claims XQJ (XQuery for Java API) conformance. Includes
a GUI for creating and editing queries. 30 day evaluation.
[2011-03-25: Last update July 2009; project homepage is gone. - Altova GmbH XMLSpy 2006 includes an XQuery Debugger, a code generator for mapping between Schemas, and AltovaXML Query Processor which handles both XSLT 2 and XML Query 1.0 [30-day free trial]
- Apple's Sherlock for Mac OS X; see also their XML Query Extension functions.
- BEA's Oracle Data Services Platform [90-day free trial]. BEA was an active participant in the XML Query Working Group; the company was bought by Oracle, also an active participant.
- Berkeley Lab's Nux, an open source Java in-memory toolkit for XML, XQuery, XPath, schema validation, fuzzy fulltext similarity search and related technologies using Saxon, XOM, Xerces and JAXB [open source under a BSD-style license]. Implements the XQuery Update Facility; Full-Text Support; latest release seems to be June 2006.
- Bluestream Database Software Corp.'s XStreamDB, a native XML database server and full text support, aimed primarily at DITA. [commercial with trial download]
- David Carlisle's xq2xml converts XQuery to XML, to XQueryX and to XSLT.
- Cerebra Inc.'s Cerebra Server supports XQuery, OWL-DL and RDF, and can connect to external databases, but their Web server no longer responds.
- Cognetic Systems's XQuantum implements XML Query 1.0 in an XML-native indexed data store. They have a Web page demonstrating the XQuery Use Cases, and support static typing and modules as well as some full-text extensions. [Windows and Linux; 30-day evaluation] Full-Text Support
- DataDirect's DataDirect XQuery (tm), an embeddable component for XQuery that implements the XQuery for Java(tm) API (XQJ) [Java; 15-day trial download]. DataDirect participates in the XML Query Working Group.
- DataDirect's Stylus Studio 5.0 (XQuery, XML Schema and XSLT IDE). DataDirect participates in the XML Query Working Group.
- EMC's xDB; this was formerly X-Hive, and EMC also owns Documentum. Their xDB product claims to be a native XML database in Java, with full XQuery support. [commercial, free evaluation download]
- eXist has a Java-based native XML database with an XQuery interface. [Open source, GNU LGPL.] Implements the XQuery Update Facility
- The open source GCX, a streaming in-memory XQuery engine with static and dynamic buffer minimzation developed originally at Saarland University [open source]
- MXQuery from ETH, a research project; the sourceforge page says, The Micro XQuery Engine is a low-footprint, extensible implementation of XQuery 1.0 including extensions like the XQuery Update and XQueryP. It supports streaming execution and runs on all devices support CLDC 1.0 upwards. [Open source, BSD/Apache license]. ETH is an active participant in the XML Query Working Group. Implements the XQuery Update Facility
- Fatdog Software's XQEngine Java. [Open source: GPL or as negotiated]. Full-Text Support [last update 2009-07-18]
- GAEL's Derby provides a Java API via their Data Request Broker. There is extensive support for data analysis, including plotting graphs and making tables.
- Galax. Open-source (in OCAML), with a Galatex full text search implementation. The authors of Galax include a number of active participants in the XML Query Working Group, both psat and present. Full-Text Support
- GNU's Qexo (Kawa-Query) by Per Bothner. Compiles XQuery on-the-fly to Java bytecodes. Based on and part of the Kawa framework. Qexo implements the optional XQuery static typing feature. [Open-source under the GPL-like Kawa License].
- HXQ, a compiler from XQuery to Haskell; appears to be an imcomplete research project, but said to be already useful. Open source, license terms unclear from the Web page.
- Ipedo's XIP includes a "dual core" SQL + XML Query engine (XMLDB).
- IBM's WebSphere Application Server Feature Pack for XML supports XPath 2.0, XSLT 2.0, and XQuery 1.0, with a Java API that unifies all three languages. [Free download; requires WebSphere Application Server, which is commercial]
- IBM's xqnsta: XQuery Normalizer and Static Analyzer (XQNSTA) is a Java API and GUI for normalizing and computing the static type of XQuery expressions. IBM is an active participant in the XML Query Working Group.
- IBM's DB2 9 stores XML in its native format and provides support for XQuery.
- IPSI's IPSI-XQ [java; free download]; this seems to have moved to sourceforge. Last update 2001-11-29.
- Ispras Modis' Sedna. Native XML DBMS in C/C++ and Scheme; partial support for XML Query. Includes an Apache HTTP module, and APIs for .NET, Python and Chicken Scheme. There is also a Firefox extension, XqUSEme, and a special build of firefox, XDIB (XQuery In a Browser), for unning client-side XQuery scripts. [Open source under the Apache License].
- Liquid Technologies' Liquid XML Studio features an XQuery Debugger [30-day trial for Microsoft platforms].
- Apache Lux combines the Lucene/Solr search index with the Saxon XQuery/XSLT processor, adding XQuery support to Solr and adding persistence to Saxon. [Open source.]
- MarkLogic's MarkLogic Server 4.0 (formerly known as Content Interaction Server). There is also a technical overview document. Commercial, with free download restricted to 100 Megaybytes of data. A limited duration trial license is also available, limited to 1G of content. Full-Text Support. Implements the XQuery Update Facility. MarkLogic is an active participant in the XML Query Working Group.
- Microsoft's SQL Server 2005 Express, with XML Schema, XPath 2, and XML Query support. Later versions of SQL Server continue to support XQuery. Microsoft is an active participant in the XML Query Working Group.
- CWI's MonetDB/XQuery is an XQuery system that also supports XQUF updates. It is based on the Pathfinder compiler developed at TU Munich, and aims at achieving high performance. Open Source (adapting the Mozilla Public License). Implements the XQuery Update Facility.
- OpenLink Software's Virtuoso Universal Server claims to support XSLT 1.2 (?! their link points to the XSLT 1.1 draft), XQuery and SQLX.
- Oracle Berkeley DB XML 2.0, formerly Sleepycat's, an embeddable native XML database with support for XQuery 1.0 (July 2004 draft), implemented in C++, with interfaces for Java, Python, Perl and PHP. Open source. Oracle is an active participant in the XML Query Working Group. Full-Text Support
- Oracle'sOracle XQuery implementation is part of the Oracle Database product [multi-platform; seems to be a free binary download]. Oracle is an active participant in the XML Query Working Group.
- Patternist, an XQuery 1.0, XSL-T 2.0 and XPath 2.0 implementation that provices a C++ API (open source under GPL, uses TrollTech's Qt library)
- PHP XML Classes includes XqueryLite, a PHP implementation from 2002. [open source]
- Politecnico di Milano's XQBE and other XQuery products
- QuiLogic's SQL/XML-IMDB supports a mixure of SQL statements and XQuery expressions. [Free trial requires a restart every hour]
- RainingData's TigerLogic XDMS XML Data Management Server for Sun Solaris and Microsoft Windows [free trial].
- Renmin University of China's OrientX, a native XML database system in C/C++ developed under Renmin University of China. [open source]
- Saarland University Database Group's FluXQuery [no longer maintained], an extension of the XQuery language, FluX, that supports event-based query processing and the conscious handling of main memory buffers. Obsoleted by GCX, but the web page is still mirrored at Cornell.
- Saxonica's Saxon implements both XML Query and XSLT 2.0. Available in a schema-aware version as a commercial product, and without schema support as open source. Saxonica is an active participant in the XML Query Working Group.
- Software AG's
- Tamino XML Server Full-Text Support
- Tamino XML Query Demo
- Sonic Software's Sonic XML Server [30-day trial]
- The Universität Konstanz's Database and Information Systems Group's BaseX (open source/GPL) Implements the XQuery Update Facility; Full-Text Support
- videlibri, an open source XPath 2 implementation in Free Pascal by Benito van der Zander. Further work continues under the name Xidel (q.v.).
- The Apache Software Foundation's VXQuery says, The focus is on the evaluation of queries on large amounts of XML data. Specifically the goal is to evaluate queries on large collections of relatively small XML documents. To achieve this queries will be evaluated on a cluster of shared nothing machines.
- The University of Texas at Arlington Computer Science Department has people working on XQP: XQuery Processing on a P2P System. [Java; open source]
- The Univerisity of Antwerp's Blixem LiXQuery engine implements a subset of XQuery intended for teaching (the download link no longer works, as of September 2009).
- Worcester Polytechnic Institute's RainbowCore. [Java. available at no charge and without warranty].
- XBird, a light-weight embeddable XQuery processor and database system written in Java, with a distributed XQuery processor. [open source]
- Xidel by Benito van der Zander, is an open source implementation (in Pascal) of XPath 2, XQuery 1 with some XPath 3 and XQuery 3 features, JSONiq, CSS selectors and templates, with the aim of making a system to scrape Web sites easily.
- XMLmind's Qizx comes in three versions: (1) an open source one (Qizx/open); (2) a commercial implementation, Qizx/db, with an indexed native XML database and full-text support, and (3) Qizx/db Free Engine, a freely downloadable version of Qizx/db but that has a database size limit of approximately one gigabyte of XML. Implements the XQuery Update Facility; Full-Text Support *-->
- Xpriori's XMS native XML database, with XPath2.0/XQuery access language support [.Net on Linux and MS Windows; free unlimited download for development purposes.]
- XQuare Group and Universite' de Versailles Saint-Quentin's: XQuare Fusion and XQuare Bridge, open-source, used to be called xQuark (see also the Xquare home page)
- XQIB, XQuery In the Browser, an XQuery plugin for Microsoft Internet Explorer [open source]
- XQilla, C++ implementation based on pathan and Xerces-C. Open source (BSD/Sleepycat license). Sleepycat (Oracle) is an active participant in the XML Query Working Group.
- XQSharp, XQuery for the .NET framework, from CBCL. Includes Schema support and static typing. XQSharp was previously known as Anglo. [commercial; free for non-commercial use] CBCL is an active participant in the XML Query Working Group.
- Xyleme's Xyleme LCMS [commercial]
- Zorba, an open source portable embeddable C++ implementation of XQuery. There are also PHP, Python and Ruby APIs. [open source, Apache licence]
Unconfirmed Implementations
Please send liam@w3.org any information about these; I have tried to contact people where possible.
- Actuate's Actuate 8 incorporates Nimble's XQuery implementation. The Summary of New Features requires a registration (!) so I cannot be sure if this still implements XML Query.
- ACL's Blackpearl 4 platform, supposedly with an embedded XQuery engine but this is not mentioned on their Web site as far as I can tell. The rights to Blackpearl were bought by ACL, who also do not seem to talk about XML Query.
- AGiLiENCE's XPeerion; AGiLiENCE is a spin-off from Siemens AG. The Web page seems not to mention XML Query.
- ATS' BizQuery [30-day free trial; no product link]
- Axyana Software's Qizx/Open is now marketed by XMLmind; [Java, open source under the Mozilla Public License]. Full-Text Support
- The Mono Project implements a draft of XML Query, although this may not be active. [open source]
- Xenos purchesed XML Global in 2003, and it is not clear from their Web page whether they still have XQuery support.
- XQuench has not released any files since 2001 and is probably defunct.
XPath 2 Implementations
Software that implements XPath 2.0, but not XML Query or XSLT 2
- AquaPath by Todd Ditchendorf is a free Cocoa-based developer tool for Mac OS X Tiger that allows you to evaluate XPath 2.0 expressions against any XML document and view the result sequence in a dynamic tree representation.
- The Mono Project implements a draft of XPath 2.0 and XQuery. [open source]
- NSXML from Apple Computers includes support for XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0; it is part of Cocoa.
- Pathan from Decision Soft [open source, uses Xerces-C]
- PathEnq from Philip Fearon (an online service) can handle XML/HTML and also HTML 5. It uses Saxon-CE running in the browser. Source code on github.
- PsychoPath is an open source XML Schema Aware XPath 2.0 Processor written in Java under the EPL license, as part of the Eclipse XSLT Project.
- Saxon can also be used as a standalone XPath 2 engine, both on Java and .NET [open source]
- Microsoft's SQL Server 2005 Express, has XML Schema, XPath 2 and XML Query support. [commercial]
- Virtual XML Garden from IBM has XPath 2.0 support and also supports some of XQuery. [commercial; source available]
- Altova GmbH XMLSpy includes an XQuery Debugger, a code generator for mapping between Schemas, and AltovaXML Query Processor which handles both XSLT 2 and XML Query 1.0 [30-day free trial]
Related Products and Resources
The following is a (non-comprehensive) list of announcements of products that will include some support for XQuery, or that are of related nature:
- XQDT, a plugin to add XQuery support to the Eclipse environment.
- The jEdit XQuery adapter plugin
- The VIM Syntax coloring for XQuery
- The BumbleBee test platform for XQuery engines
- Java Specification Request for an XQuery API for Java (XQJ)
- A set of reusable XQuery function examples from Priscilla Walmsley that she plans to grow over time; includes descriptions of the built-in functions from her book (see below).
- NIST's XQuery Functions and Operators test suite
- Sourceforge's JXQuery: https://sourceforge.net/projects/jxquery. Open-source.
- Sourceforge's Kweelt: https://kweelt.sourceforge.net/. Implementation of Quilt, an earlier query language. Open-source.
Publications
Books
I have tried to indicate where authors participated in the XML Query Working Group, sent comments on the specifications, or have written implementations themselves. This does not necessarily make them good writers, but it may help you to understand their point of view and their connection with XML Query.
Books that I have received more recently are at the top of the list.
An XQuery Wikibook by Chris Wallace, Dan Mcreary and Kurt Cagle
-
Querying XML : XQuery, XPath, and SQL/XML in context by Jim Melton and Stephen Buxton; The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Data Management Systems, 2006. The book also has its own Querying XML Web page. [Both authors have participated heavily in the development of XML Query; Jim Melton is currently the co-chair of the W3C XML Query Working Group. - Liam]
XQuery: The XML Query Language by Michael Brundage; Addison-Wesley Professional, February 2004. With a foreword by Michael Rys. Book web site at www.qbrundage.com/xquery/. [The first half of the book is an introduction to XQuery, including an interesting chapter on Idioms. The second half is a reference. - Liam]
XQuery from the Experts edited by Howard Katz, with chapters by Don Chamberlin, Denise Draper, Mary Fernandez, Michael Kay, Jonathan Robie, Michael Rys, Jerome Simeon, Jim Tivy and Philip Wadler. Addison-Wesley Professional, September 2003. There are two chapters online at www.fatdog.com. [Although this book is older, the text is a very happy mix of tutorials, design rationale and examples. The authors have been heavily involved in the design of XML Query, and most have been active memebers of the W3C XML Query Working Group; the editor, Howard Katz, has also made his own open-source implementation. - Liam]
I have not seen the following books:
- XQuery by Priscilla Walmsley. O'Reilly; expected late 2006. The first half is available through their "Rough Cuts" program (at https://www.oreilly.com/catalog/xquery/) and at Priscilla's information page at https://www.datypic.com/books/xquery. [I have not seen this book. Priscilla made many helpful comments on the specifications - Liam]
XQuery Kick Start by James McGovern, Per Bothner, Kurt Cagle, James Linn and Vaidyanathan Nagarajan; Sams, September 2003. [I have not seen this book. Per Bothner made many helpful public comments on the specifications - Liam]
Early Adopter XQuery by Dan Maharry, Rogerio Saran, Kurt Cagle, Mark Fussell and Nalleli Lopez. Wrox Press; January, 2002. [This book was probably too early to be of use today, although I have not seen it to be sure. I am listing it for completeness. Michael Brundage has written that it is out of date, but that it reviewed some XQuery APIs - Liam]
Querying XML with XQuery (Advances in Database Systems) by Yannis Papakonstantinou and Ioana Manolescu. Springer; March 2006 [forthcoming, I assume. Ioana participates in the XML Query Working Group. - Liam]
XQuery - Grundlagen und fortgeschrittene Methoden by Wolfgang Lehner. dpunkt.verlag, January 2004; this book is downloadable from Amazon for US$30.
Tutorials
A Google search for "(XQuery tutorial"|"XML Query tutorial") produced over 150 matches (Google actually said about 30,500 but this turned out to mean exactly 153).
Other Pointers
To suggest a new pointer, send an email to member-query-feedback@w3.org.
- IBM Systems Journal Vol 45, No. 2, 2006 - Celebrating 10 Years of XML has a number of articles on or relating to XML Query.
- Choosing Between XSLT 2.0 and XML Query 1.0 by Mike Kay (Saxonica), a talk given at the WWW 2006 conference in May 2006.
- An XML based architecture for Web 2.0 applications by Daniela Florescu (Oracle Corp.), a talk given at the WWW 2006 conference in May 2006.
- Jonathan Bruce's blog covering XQuery topics from the perspective of .NET and Java developers, including some XQJ coverage.
- Jonathan Robie's XQuery Blog
- Oxygen XML's <oXygen/> editor includes an XQuery debugger that relies on Saxon. The editor is in Java and runs on Linux and Unix as well as on Microsoft Windows and Mac OS X.
- A brief article, XQuery 1.0 is Nearing Completion by Andrew Eisenberg and Jim Melton, ACM SIGMOD Record, Vol. 34, No. 4, December 2005.
- Blooming FLWOR - An Introduction to the XQuery FLWOR Expression, a tutorial by Dr. Michael Kay, the sequel to Learn XQuery in 10 Minutes (see next item).
- Learn XQuery In 10 Minutes by Dr. Michael H. Kay
- Introduction to XQuery, a tutorial by Priscilla Walmsley (updated to align with June 2006 CR documents)
- Essential XQuery - The XML Query Language, tutorial, 2004.
- A Light but Formal Introduction to XQuery, research/educational article, Dec 2004.
- Using XQuery in ASP.NET article/tutorial by Pieter Siegers, Aug 2004.
- XPath 2.0 Programmer's Reference book by Wrox, Aug 2004.
- XQuery: The XML Query Language, book by Addison-Wesley, Feb 2004
- Learn XQuery and ASP.NET Tutorial, Jan 2004.
- XQuery Implementation, Oct 2003.
- XQuery: A Guided Tour, Sep 2003.
- XQuery from the Experts: A Guide to the W3C XML Query Language, book by Addison-Wesley, Sep 2003.
- XQuery 1.0: Primer, Jul 2003.
- XQuery, the Query Language of the Future, Jul 2003.
- Writing and Debugging XQuery Web Apps with Qexo, Jun 2003.
- Interactive Web Applications with XQuery, May 2003.
- X Is for XQuery, May 2003.
- Five Practical XQuery Applications, May 2003.
- Processing RSS, April 2003.
- XQuery Kick Start, book by Sams (2003).
- An Early Look at XQuery, SIGMOD record, vol.31, n.4, 2002.
- XQuery: An XML query language, tutorial overview, IBM Systems Journal 41(4), 2002.
- Early Adopter XQuery, book by Wrox (2002).
- A Data Model for Strongly Typed XML, December 2002.
- Process XML using XML Query, tutorial, 2002.
- What is Xquery?, introductory article, 2002.
- Presentation on XPath and XQuery held at the 11th International World Wide Web Conference, Hawaii, May, 2002.
- What's new in XPath 2.0, introductory article, March, 2002.
- Presentation on XML Query held at the 20th Unicode Conference, Washington, January, 2002.
- XQuery Formal Semantics State and Challenges, SIGMOD record, vol.30, n.3, 2001.
- Presentation on XML Query held at the 10th International World Wide Web Conference (WWW10), Hong Kong, May, 2001.
- Presentation on XML Query held at the 9th International World Wide Web Conference (WWW9), Amsterdam, May 19, 2000.
- Where it all started: the Query Languages'98 (QL'98) workshop, with its unique collection of contributed works.
- The XML Activity Statement also explains the W3C's work on query language,
- The XML Query charter.
- The XML Query Working Group page (W3C members only)
Contacting Us
To contact the XML Query and XSL Working Groups, you can send email to public-qt-comments at w3.org
To report errors in the specification please use bugzilla, as described in the Status section at the start of each specification.
To comment on this page, send mail to liam at w3 dot org
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Page maintained by Liam Quin.
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