Oxygen XML Editor
The Premier All-In-One XML Editing Suite
Oxygen XML Author
Single-Source XML Authoring and Multi-Channel Publishing
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The Required Tools for Designing XML Schemas and Transformation Pipelines
Oxygen JSON Editor
The Perfect Tool to Simplify Your JSON Editing Experience
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The Complete DITA Publishing Solution for WebHelp and PDF Output
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Chemistry Converts HTML and XML to PDF Using CSS
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Publish DITA and DocBook Content to WebHelp Output
Oxygen Styles Basket
Customize the Look and Feel of Your PDF and WebHelp Output
Oxygen XML Web Author
Engage Your Whole Organization In Content Creation
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The Web-based Collaboration Platform to Craft Tomorrow's Content
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Modern Commenting Platform
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Automate and Run Oxygen Utilities from the Command-Line Interface
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Specifically designed for application developers and integrators
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After defining the descriptor, you can verify whether the defined messages are accepted by the Web Services server. Oxygen provides two ways of testing, one for the currently edited WSDL file and another for the remote WSDL files that are published on a web server.
Testing of a WSDL file is straight-forward. You just have to click on the WSDL analyzer button, then select the service, port, and operation. The editor will generate the skeleton for the request. You can edit the request, eventually attach files to it, and send it to the server. You can see the server's response in the response area.
The analyzer dialog box is docked in the editor user interface. You can move it wherever you consider it to be most useful. The requests are associated with the port numbers, so if you change the port, the request for that port is set in the analyzer. You can pretty-print both the request and the response by using an action from the contextual menu.
Once defined, a request derived from a Web Service descriptor can be save and re-used later. This will allow you to save time when configuring the URLs and parameters.
You can choose to open the results of a web service call in the editor and then save it or process it further.
Using the UDDI Registry Browser, you can browse UDDI registries and search for published Web services.