Friday, July 30, 2010

Professional PHP Web Services

March 21, 2010 by Ca-Mi.com  
Filed under Web Services Books

Product Description
Web Services is a new paradigm that has evolved with time. With successful demonstration of proof of concept, Web Services are gradually moving towards occupying an important space in enterprise computing. In this book, we will discuss the consumption, development and deployment, description, discovery and security of Web Services in conjunction with the PHP programming model for Web services.

Buy from Amazon Professional PHP Web Services

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Comments

5 Responses to “Professional PHP Web Services”
  1. Jake Well says:

    Why so many bad reviews? Many of the authors are mad because the company had went out of business and many of them did not get paid royalty fees. In response, it is no doubt that they would wish the publisher to not profit from their own work – there is no justice in that. The truth is that this book is quite good, but due to the circumstances surrounding the entire thing, there is a lot of negativity in the air. I would suggest that you buy the book on its merits rather than the reviews, which I can only honestly suspect are all written by constituents in one form or another with different agendas.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  2. Anonymous says:

    One thing I can’t understand from Wrox books is that they say, “Fantastic! It really made me rethink my career!”, all the time. You wonder if the publisher themselves had anything to do with it.

    While some of the chapters in the book are quite well written, the book as a whole is somewhat useless. I wish some of these chapters were put into a ‘generic Web Services’ book, since they are pretty good when PHP isn’t concerned, but as for everything else – it pretty much stinks.

    I’m tired of the Wrox books. What do they do? – slave drive would-be computer scientist from pakistan to pump out the book that they do? There isn’t quality or quantity here. It just’s a poorly thought out book. For one, it doesn’t even have any case studios. Two, php and web services suck anyway.

    Just don’t buy it.
    Rating: 1 / 5

  3. Anonymous says:

    I think it’s a nice book, good job! It introduces wide range about the relationship between PHP and the web services, it’s a good base to start. However I have to tell, that there are some bugs (or the descriptions are not clear, don’t know) in the example sources, for example I’ve found one in the chapter about security (Chapter 6).

    This is a problem, but with it, I still could recommend this book for everybody not familiar with Web Services, and would like to learn all the related technologies. As it is true at other books, too: you can learn all these things from the web, but you can just find these together in this (or other) book, and you can read it conveniently at your bed with your girlfriend. :)
    Rating: 4 / 5

  4. Marie Claire says:

    The content in this book simply rawks – all the latest information on how you can do web services using PHP.There is a wealth on information on how you can use PHP and SOAP (using popular libraries such as NuSOAP, PEAR::SOAP and ezSOAP), PHP and SOAP’s front-runner (XML-RPC), how you can discover web services using UDDI. Infact, there is a quality library for PHP::UDDI, that was created for the book, and which the authors have very kindly hosted on sourceforge (phpuddi.sourceforge.net/).

    This is *the* book on the subject. Check it out today.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  5. Anonymous says:

    …the content is actually quite good. I was surprised to see that there were more OO examples and the book’s structure was well thought-out. I wouldn’t expect too much from a book on PHP Web Services however, since PHP has a lot of maturing to do and you won’t learn much else other than XML-RPC, SOAP and WSDL and how to use these technologies in PHP. I believe an amateur can learn these technologies using PHP in the better part of a day.

    Another gripe about the book is that it’s the standard price of a Wrox book but it’s only around 500 pages (unlike the usual 800-1000). If you refer to initial arguments, where is that extra money going for these missing pages? Surely not to the contributors.

    In any case, please think twice before you purchase the book. Not only is this a highly specialized topic that can be easily learned without the book, but the overall value and ethical consequences make it even worse. Don’t expect the contributors to benefit from your purchase.
    Rating: 1 / 5