|
The W3C defines a Web service as a software system designed to support
interoperable Machine to Machine interaction over a network. Web services are
frequently just Web APIs that can be accessed over a network, such as the
Internet, and executed on a remote system hosting the requested services.
The W3C Web service definition encompasses many
different systems, but in common usage the term refers to clients and servers
that communicate XML messages that follow the SOAP-standard. Common in both the
field and the terminology is the assumption that there is also a machine
readable description of the operations supported by the server, a description
in the WSDL. The latter is not a requirement of SOAP endpoint, but it is a
prerequisite for automated client-side code generation in the mainstream Java
and .NET SOAP frameworks. Some industry organizations, such as the WS-I,
mandate both SOAP and WSDL in their definition of a Web service.

Our Web Development team has profound knowledge in
developing highly stable and standard web services using .NET Framework,
CGI-Perl etc... and also to consume third party webservices effectively.
|