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Wikipedia

XML

Extensible Markup Language (XML) is a markup language and file format for storing, transmitting, and reconstructing arbitrary data. It defines a set of rules for encoding documents in a format that is both human-readable and machine-readable. The World Wide Web Consortium's XML 1.0 Specification[2] of 1998[3] and several other related specifications[4]—all of them free open standards—define XML.[5]

XML (standard)
Extensible Markup Language
AbbreviationXML
StatusPublished, W3C recommendation
Year started1996; 27 years ago (1996)
First publishedFebruary 10, 1998; 25 years ago (1998-02-10)
Latest version1.1 (2nd ed.)
September 29, 2006; 16 years ago (2006-09-29)
OrganizationWorld Wide Web Consortium (W3C)
EditorsTim Bray, Jean Paoli, Michael Sperberg-McQueen, Eve Maler, François Yergeau, John W. Cowan
Base standardsSGML
Related standardsW3C XML Schema
DomainSerialization
Websitewww.w3.org/xml
XML (file format)
Filename extension
.xml
Internet media typeapplication/xml, text/xml[1]
Uniform Type Identifier (UTI)public.xml
UTI conformationpublic.text
Magic number<?xml
Developed byWorld Wide Web Consortium
Type of formatMarkup language
Extended fromSGML
Extended toNumerous languages, including XHTML, RSS, Atom, and KML
Standard
  • 1.0, 5th ed. (November 26, 2008 (2008-11-26))
  • 1.1, 2nd ed. (August 16, 2006 (2006-08-16))
Open format?Yes
Free format?Yes

The design goals of XML emphasize simplicity, generality, and usability across the Internet.[6] It is a textual data format with strong support via Unicode for different human languages. Although the design of XML focuses on documents, the language is widely used for the representation of arbitrary data structures[7] such as those used in web services.

Several schema systems exist to aid in the definition of XML-based languages, while programmers have developed many application programming interfaces (APIs) to aid the processing of XML data.

Overview

The main purpose of XML is serialization, i.e. storing, transmitting, and reconstructing arbitrary data. For two disparate systems to exchange information, they need to agree upon a file format. XML standardizes this process. It is therefore analogous to a lingua franca for representing information.[8]: 1 

As a markup language, XML labels, categorizes, and structurally organizes information.[8]: 11  XML tags represent the data structure and contain metadata. What's within the tags is data, encoded in the way the XML standard specifies.[8]: 11  An additional XML schema (XSD) defines the necessary metadata for interpreting and validating XML. (This is also referred to as the canonical schema.)[8]: 135  An XML document that adheres to basic XML rules is "well-formed"; one that adheres to its schema is "valid."[8]: 135 

IETF RFC 7303 (which supersedes the older RFC 3023), provides rules for the construction of media types for use in XML message. It defines three media types: application/xml (text/xml is an alias), application/xml-external-parsed-entity (text/xml-external-parsed-entity is an alias) and application/xml-dtd. They are used for transmitting raw XML files without exposing their internal semantics. RFC 7303 further recommends that XML-based languages be given media types ending in +xml, for example, image/svg+xml for SVG.

Further guidelines for the use of XML in a networked context appear in RFC 3470, also known as IETF BCP 70, a document covering many aspects of designing and deploying an XML-based language.

Applications

XML has come into common use for the interchange of data over the Internet. Hundreds of document formats using XML syntax have been developed,[9] including RSS, Atom, Office Open XML, OpenDocument, SVG, COLLADA, and XHTML. XML also provides the base language for communication protocols such as SOAP and XMPP. It is the message exchange format for the Asynchronous JavaScript and XML (AJAX) programming technique.

Many industry data standards, such as Health Level 7, OpenTravel Alliance, FpML, MISMO, and National Information Exchange Model are based on XML and the rich features of the XML schema specification. In publishing, Darwin Information Typing Architecture is an XML industry data standard. XML is used extensively to underpin various publishing formats.

Key terminology

The material in this section is based on the XML Specification. This is not an exhaustive list of all the constructs that appear in XML; it provides an introduction to the key constructs most often encountered in day-to-day use.

Character
An XML document is a string of characters. Every legal Unicode character (except Null) may appear in an (1.1) XML document (while some are discouraged).
Processor and application
The processor analyzes the markup and passes structured information to an application. The specification places requirements on what an XML processor must do and not do, but the application is outside its scope. The processor (as the specification calls it) is often referred to colloquially as an XML parser.
Markup and content
The characters making up an XML document are divided into markup and content, which may be distinguished by the application of simple syntactic rules. Generally, strings that constitute markup either begin with the character < and end with a >, or they begin with the character & and end with a ;. Strings of characters that are not markup are content. However, in a CDATA section, the delimiters <![CDATA[ and ]]> are classified as markup, while the text between them is classified as content. In addition, whitespace before and after the outermost element is classified as markup.
Tag
A tag is a markup construct that begins with < and ends with >. There are three types of tag:
  • start-tag, such as <section>;
  • end-tag, such as </section>;
  • empty-element tag, such as <line-break />.
Element
An element is a logical document component that either begins with a start-tag and ends with a matching end-tag or consists only of an empty-element tag. The characters between the start-tag and end-tag, if any, are the element's content, and may contain markup, including other elements, which are called child elements. An example is <greeting>Hello, world!</greeting>. Another is <line-break />.
Attribute
An attribute is a markup construct consisting of a name–value pair that exists within a start-tag or empty-element tag. An example is <img src="madonna.jpg" alt="Madonna" />, where the names of the attributes are "src" and "alt", and their values are "madonna.jpg" and "Madonna" respectively. Another example is <step number="3">Connect A to B.</step>, where the name of the attribute is "number" and its value is "3". An XML attribute can only have a single value and each attribute can appear at most once on each element. In the common situation where a list of multiple values is desired, this must be done by encoding the list into a well-formed XML attribute[i] with some format beyond what XML defines itself. Usually this is either a comma or semi-colon delimited list or, if the individual values are known not to contain spaces,[ii] a space-delimited list can be used. <div class="inner greeting-box">Welcome!</div>, where the attribute "class" has both the value "inner greeting-box" and also indicates the two CSS class names "inner" and "greeting-box".
XML declaration
XML documents may begin with an XML declaration that describes some information about themselves. An example is <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>.

Characters and escaping

XML documents consist entirely of characters from the Unicode repertoire. Except for a small number of specifically excluded control characters, any character defined by Unicode may appear within the content of an XML document.

XML includes facilities for identifying the encoding of the Unicode characters that make up the document, and for expressing characters that, for one reason or another, cannot be used directly.

Valid characters

Unicode code points in the following ranges are valid in XML 1.0 documents:[10]

  • U+0009 (Horizontal Tab), U+000A (Line Feed), U+000D (Carriage Return): these are the only C0 controls accepted in XML 1.0;
  • U+0020–U+D7FF, U+E000–U+FFFD: this excludes some noncharacters in the BMP (all surrogates, U+FFFE and U+FFFF are forbidden);
  • U+10000–U+10FFFF: this includes all code points in supplementary planes, including noncharacters.

XML 1.1 extends the set of allowed characters to include all the above, plus the remaining characters in the range U+0001–U+001F.[11] At the same time, however, it restricts the use of C0 and C1 control characters other than U+0009 (Horizontal Tab), U+000A (Line Feed), U+000D (Carriage Return), and U+0085 (Next Line) by requiring them to be written in escaped form (for example U+0001 must be written as &#x01; or its equivalent). In the case of C1 characters, this restriction is a backwards incompatibility; it was introduced to allow common encoding errors to be detected.

The code point U+0000 (Null) is the only character that is not permitted in any XML 1.1 document.

Encoding detection

The Unicode character set can be encoded into bytes for storage or transmission in a variety of different ways, called "encodings". Unicode itself defines encodings that cover the entire repertoire; well-known ones include UTF-8 (which the XML standard recommends using, without a BOM) and UTF-16.[12] There are many other text encodings that predate Unicode, such as ASCII and various ISO/IEC 8859; their character repertoires are in every case subsets of the Unicode character set.

XML allows the use of any of the Unicode-defined encodings and any other encodings whose characters also appear in Unicode. XML also provides a mechanism whereby an XML processor can reliably, without any prior knowledge, determine which encoding is being used.[13] Encodings other than UTF-8 and UTF-16 are not necessarily recognized by every XML parser (and in some cases not even UTF-16, even though the standard mandates it to also be recognized).

Escaping

XML provides escape facilities for including characters that are problematic to include directly. For example:

  • The characters "<" and "&" are key syntax markers and may never appear in content outside a CDATA section. It is allowed, but not recommended, to use "<" in XML entity values.[14]
  • Some character encodings support only a subset of Unicode. For example, it is legal to encode an XML document in ASCII, but ASCII lacks code points for Unicode characters such as "é".
  • It might not be possible to type the character on the author's machine.
  • Some characters have glyphs that cannot be visually distinguished from other characters, such as the nonbreaking space (&#xa0;) " " and the space (&#x20;) " ", and the Cyrillic capital letter A (&#x410;) "А" and the Latin capital letter A (&#x41;) "A".

There are five predefined entities:

  • &lt; represents "<";
  • &gt; represents ">";
  • &amp; represents "&";
  • &apos; represents "'";
  • &quot; represents '"'.

All permitted Unicode characters may be represented with a numeric character reference. Consider the Chinese character "中", whose numeric code in Unicode is hexadecimal 4E2D, or decimal 20,013. A user whose keyboard offers no method for entering this character could still insert it in an XML document encoded either as &#20013; or &#x4e2d;. Similarly, the string "I <3 Jörg" could be encoded for inclusion in an XML document as I &lt;3 J&#xF6;rg.

&#0; is not permitted because the null character is one of the control characters excluded from XML, even when using a numeric character reference.[15] An alternative encoding mechanism such as Base64 is needed to represent such characters.

Comments

Comments may appear anywhere in a document outside other markup. Comments cannot appear before the XML declaration. Comments begin with <!-- and end with -->. For compatibility with SGML, the string "--" (double-hyphen) is not allowed inside comments;[16] this means comments cannot be nested. The ampersand has no special significance within comments, so entity and character references are not recognized as such, and there is no way to represent characters outside the character set of the document encoding.

An example of a valid comment: <!--no need to escape <code> & such in comments-->

International use

XML 1.0 (Fifth Edition) and XML 1.1 support the direct use of almost any Unicode character in element names, attributes, comments, character data, and processing instructions (other than the ones that have special symbolic meaning in XML itself, such as the less-than sign, "<"). The following is a well-formed XML document including Chinese, Armenian and Cyrillic characters:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <俄语 լեզու="ռուսերեն">данные</俄语> 

Syntactical correctness and error-handling

The XML specification defines an XML document as a well-formed text, meaning that it satisfies a list of syntax rules provided in the specification. Some key points in the fairly lengthy list include:

  • The document contains only properly encoded legal Unicode characters.
  • None of the special syntax characters such as < and & appear except when performing their markup-delineation roles.
  • The start-tag, end-tag, and empty-element tag that delimit elements are correctly nested, with none missing and none overlapping.
  • Tag names are case-sensitive; the start-tag and end-tag must match exactly.
  • Tag names cannot contain any of the characters !"#$%&'()*+,/;<=>?@[\]^`{|}~, nor a space character, and cannot begin with "-", ".", or a numeric digit.
  • A single root element contains all the other elements.

The definition of an XML document excludes texts that contain violations of well-formedness rules; they are simply not XML. An XML processor that encounters such a violation is required to report such errors and to cease normal processing. This policy, occasionally referred to as "draconian error handling," stands in notable contrast to the behavior of programs that process HTML, which are designed to produce a reasonable result even in the presence of severe markup errors.[17] XML's policy in this area has been criticized as a violation of Postel's law ("Be conservative in what you send; be liberal in what you accept").[18]

The XML specification defines a valid XML document as a well-formed XML document which also conforms to the rules of a Document Type Definition (DTD).[19][20]

Schemas and validation

In addition to being well formed, an XML document may be valid. This means that it contains a reference to a Document Type Definition (DTD), and that its elements and attributes are declared in that DTD and follow the grammatical rules for them that the DTD specifies.

XML processors are classified as validating or non-validating depending on whether or not they check XML documents for validity. A processor that discovers a validity error must be able to report it, but may continue normal processing.

A DTD is an example of a schema or grammar. Since the initial publication of XML 1.0, there has been substantial work in the area of schema languages for XML. Such schema languages typically constrain the set of elements that may be used in a document, which attributes may be applied to them, the order in which they may appear, and the allowable parent/child relationships.

Document type definition

The oldest schema language for XML is the document type definition (DTD), inherited from SGML.

DTDs have the following benefits:

  • DTD support is ubiquitous due to its inclusion in the XML 1.0 standard.
  • DTDs are terse compared to element-based schema languages and consequently present more information in a single screen.
  • DTDs allow the declaration of standard public entity sets for publishing characters.
  • DTDs define a document type rather than the types used by a namespace, thus grouping all constraints for a document in a single collection.

DTDs have the following limitations:

  • They have no explicit support for newer features of XML, most importantly namespaces.
  • They lack expressiveness. XML DTDs are simpler than SGML DTDs and there are certain structures that cannot be expressed with regular grammars. DTDs only support rudimentary datatypes.
  • They lack readability. DTD designers typically make heavy use of parameter entities (which behave essentially as textual macros), which make it easier to define complex grammars, but at the expense of clarity.
  • They use a syntax based on regular expression syntax, inherited from SGML, to describe the schema. Typical XML APIs such as SAX do not attempt to offer applications a structured representation of the syntax, so it is less accessible to programmers than an element-based syntax may be.

Two peculiar features that distinguish DTDs from other schema types are the syntactic support for embedding a DTD within XML documents and for defining entities, which are arbitrary fragments of text or markup that the XML processor inserts in the DTD itself and in the XML document wherever they are referenced, like character escapes.

DTD technology is still used in many applications because of its ubiquity.

Schema

A newer schema language, described by the W3C as the successor of DTDs, is XML Schema, often referred to by the initialism for XML Schema instances, XSD (XML Schema Definition). XSDs are far more powerful than DTDs in describing XML languages. They use a rich datatyping system and allow for more detailed constraints on an XML document's logical structure. XSDs also use an XML-based format, which makes it possible to use ordinary XML tools to help process them.

xs:schema element that defines a schema:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <xs:schema xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"></xs:schema> 

RELAX NG

RELAX NG (Regular Language for XML Next Generation) was initially specified by OASIS and is now a standard (Part 2: Regular-grammar-based validation of ISO/IEC 19757 – DSDL). RELAX NG schemas may be written in either an XML based syntax or a more compact non-XML syntax; the two syntaxes are isomorphic and James Clark's conversion tool—Trang—can convert between them without loss of information. RELAX NG has a simpler definition and validation framework than XML Schema, making it easier to use and implement. It also has the ability to use datatype framework plug-ins; a RELAX NG schema author, for example, can require values in an XML document to conform to definitions in XML Schema Datatypes.

Schematron

Schematron is a language for making assertions about the presence or absence of patterns in an XML document. It typically uses XPath expressions. Schematron is now a standard (Part 3: Rule-based validation of ISO/IEC 19757 – DSDL).

DSDL and other schema languages

DSDL (Document Schema Definition Languages) is a multi-part ISO/IEC standard (ISO/IEC 19757) that brings together a comprehensive set of small schema languages, each targeted at specific problems. DSDL includes RELAX NG full and compact syntax, Schematron assertion language, and languages for defining datatypes, character repertoire constraints, renaming and entity expansion, and namespace-based routing of document fragments to different validators. DSDL schema languages do not have the vendor support of XML Schemas yet, and are to some extent a grassroots reaction of industrial publishers to the lack of utility of XML Schemas for publishing.

Some schema languages not only describe the structure of a particular XML format but also offer limited facilities to influence processing of individual XML files that conform to this format. DTDs and XSDs both have this ability; they can for instance provide the infoset augmentation facility and attribute defaults. RELAX NG and Schematron intentionally do not provide these.

Related specifications

A cluster of specifications closely related to XML have been developed, starting soon after the initial publication of XML 1.0. It is frequently the case that the term "XML" is used to refer to XML together with one or more of these other technologies that have come to be seen as part of the XML core.

  • XML namespaces enable the same document to contain XML elements and attributes taken from different vocabularies, without any naming collisions occurring. Although XML Namespaces are not part of the XML specification itself, virtually all XML software also supports XML Namespaces.
  • XML Base defines the xml:base attribute, which may be used to set the base for resolution of relative URI references within the scope of a single XML element.
  • XML Information Set or XML Infoset is an abstract data model for XML documents in terms of information items. The infoset is commonly used in the specifications of XML languages, for convenience in describing constraints on the XML constructs those languages allow.
  • XSL (Extensible Stylesheet Language) is a family of languages used to transform and render XML documents, split into three parts:
  • XSLT (XSL Transformations), an XML language for transforming XML documents into other XML documents or other formats such as HTML, plain text, or XSL-FO. XSLT is very tightly coupled with XPath, which it uses to address components of the input XML document, mainly elements and attributes.
  • XSL-FO (XSL Formatting Objects), an XML language for rendering XML documents, often used to generate PDFs.
  • XPath (XML Path Language), a non-XML language for addressing the components (elements, attributes, and so on) of an XML document. XPath is widely used in other core-XML specifications and in programming libraries for accessing XML-encoded data.
  • XQuery (XML Query) is an XML query language strongly rooted in XPath and XML Schema. It provides methods to access, manipulate and return XML, and is mainly conceived as a query language for XML databases.
  • XML Signature defines syntax and processing rules for creating digital signatures on XML content.
  • XML Encryption defines syntax and processing rules for encrypting XML content.
  • XML model (Part 11: Schema Association of ISO/IEC 19757 – DSDL) defines a means of associating any xml document with any of the schema types mentioned above.

Some other specifications conceived as part of the "XML Core" have failed to find wide adoption, including XInclude, XLink, and XPointer.

Programming interfaces

The design goals of XML include, "It shall be easy to write programs which process XML documents."[6] Despite this, the XML specification contains almost no information about how programmers might go about doing such processing. The XML Infoset specification provides a vocabulary to refer to the constructs within an XML document, but does not provide any guidance on how to access this information. A variety of APIs for accessing XML have been developed and used, and some have been standardized.

Existing APIs for XML processing tend to fall into these categories:

  • Stream-oriented APIs accessible from a programming language, for example SAX and StAX.
  • Tree-traversal APIs accessible from a programming language, for example DOM.
  • XML data binding, which provides an automated translation between an XML document and programming-language objects.
  • Declarative transformation languages such as XSLT and XQuery.
  • Syntax extensions to general-purpose programming languages, for example LINQ and Scala.

Stream-oriented facilities require less memory and, for certain tasks based on a linear traversal of an XML document, are faster and simpler than other alternatives. Tree-traversal and data-binding APIs typically require the use of much more memory, but are often found more convenient for use by programmers; some include declarative retrieval of document components via the use of XPath expressions.

XSLT is designed for declarative description of XML document transformations, and has been widely implemented both in server-side packages and Web browsers. XQuery overlaps XSLT in its functionality, but is designed more for searching of large XML databases.

Simple API for XML

Simple API for XML (SAX) is a lexical, event-driven API in which a document is read serially and its contents are reported as callbacks to various methods on a handler object of the user's design. SAX is fast and efficient to implement, but difficult to use for extracting information at random from the XML, since it tends to burden the application author with keeping track of what part of the document is being processed. It is better suited to situations in which certain types of information are always handled the same way, no matter where they occur in the document.

Pull parsing

Pull parsing treats the document as a series of items read in sequence using the iterator design pattern. This allows for writing of recursive descent parsers in which the structure of the code performing the parsing mirrors the structure of the XML being parsed, and intermediate parsed results can be used and accessed as local variables within the functions performing the parsing, or passed down (as function parameters) into lower-level functions, or returned (as function return values) to higher-level functions.[21] Examples of pull parsers include Data::Edit::Xml in Perl, StAX in the Java programming language, XMLPullParser in Smalltalk, XMLReader in PHP, ElementTree.iterparse in Python, System.Xml.XmlReader in the .NET Framework, and the DOM traversal API (NodeIterator and TreeWalker).

A pull parser creates an iterator that sequentially visits the various elements, attributes, and data in an XML document. Code that uses this iterator can test the current item (to tell, for example, whether it is a start-tag or end-tag, or text), and inspect its attributes (local name, namespace, values of XML attributes, value of text, etc.), and can also move the iterator to the next item. The code can thus extract information from the document as it traverses it. The recursive-descent approach tends to lend itself to keeping data as typed local variables in the code doing the parsing, while SAX, for instance, typically requires a parser to manually maintain intermediate data within a stack of elements that are parent elements of the element being parsed. Pull-parsing code can be more straightforward to understand and maintain than SAX parsing code.

Document Object Model

Document Object Model (DOM) is an API that allows for navigation of the entire document as if it were a tree of node objects representing the document's contents. A DOM document can be created by a parser, or can be generated manually by users (with limitations). Data types in DOM nodes are abstract; implementations provide their own programming language-specific bindings. DOM implementations tend to be memory intensive, as they generally require the entire document to be loaded into memory and constructed as a tree of objects before access is allowed.

Data binding

XML data binding is a powerful technique for simplifying the development of applications that need to work with XML documents. This technique involves mapping the XML document to a hierarchy of strongly typed objects, rather than using the generic objects created by a DOM parser. The resulting code is often easier to read and maintain, and it can help to identify problems at compile time rather than run-time. XML data binding is particularly well-suited for applications where the document structure is known and fixed at the time the application is written. By creating a strongly typed representation of the XML data, developers can take advantage of modern integrated development environments (IDEs) that provide features like auto-complete, code refactoring, and code highlighting. This can make it easier to write correct and efficient code, and reduce the risk of errors and bugs. Overall, XML data binding is a powerful technique for building robust and maintainable applications that work with XML data. Example data binding systems include the Java Architecture for XML Binding (JAXB), XML Serialization in .NET Framework.[22] and XML serialization in gSOAP.

XML as data type

XML has appeared as a first-class data type in other languages. The ECMAScript for XML (E4X) extension to the ECMAScript/JavaScript language explicitly defines two specific objects (XML and XMLList) for JavaScript, which support XML document nodes and XML node lists as distinct objects and use a dot-notation specifying parent-child relationships.[23] E4X is supported by the Mozilla 2.5+ browsers (though now deprecated) and Adobe Actionscript, but has not been adopted more universally. Similar notations are used in Microsoft's LINQ implementation for Microsoft .NET 3.5 and above, and in Scala (which uses the Java VM). The open-source xmlsh application, which provides a Linux-like shell with special features for XML manipulation, similarly treats XML as a data type, using the <[ ]> notation.[24] The Resource Description Framework defines a data type rdf:XMLLiteral to hold wrapped, canonical XML.[25] Facebook has produced extensions to the PHP and JavaScript languages that add XML to the core syntax in a similar fashion to E4X, namely XHP and JSX respectively.

History

XML is an application profile of SGML (ISO 8879).[26]

The versatility of SGML for dynamic information display was understood by early digital media publishers in the late 1980s prior to the rise of the Internet.[27][28] By the mid-1990s some practitioners of SGML had gained experience with the then-new World Wide Web, and believed that SGML offered solutions to some of the problems the Web was likely to face as it grew. Dan Connolly added SGML to the list of W3C's activities when he joined the staff in 1995; work began in mid-1996 when Sun Microsystems engineer Jon Bosak developed a charter and recruited collaborators. Bosak was well connected in the small community of people who had experience both in SGML and the Web.[29]

XML was compiled by a working group of eleven members,[30] supported by a (roughly) 150-member Interest Group. Technical debate took place on the Interest Group mailing list and issues were resolved by consensus or, when that failed, majority vote of the Working Group. A record of design decisions and their rationales was compiled by Michael Sperberg-McQueen on December 4, 1997.[31] James Clark served as Technical Lead of the Working Group, notably contributing the empty-element <empty /> syntax and the name "XML". Other names that had been put forward for consideration included "MAGMA" (Minimal Architecture for Generalized Markup Applications), "SLIM" (Structured Language for Internet Markup) and "MGML" (Minimal Generalized Markup Language). The co-editors of the specification were originally Tim Bray and Michael Sperberg-McQueen. Halfway through the project Bray accepted a consulting engagement with Netscape, provoking vociferous protests from Microsoft. Bray was temporarily asked to resign the editorship. This led to intense dispute in the Working Group, eventually solved by the appointment of Microsoft's Jean Paoli as a third co-editor.

The XML Working Group communicated primarily through email and weekly teleconferences. The major design decisions were reached in a short burst of intense work between August and November 1996,[32] when the first Working Draft of an XML specification was published.[33] Further design work continued through 1997, and XML 1.0 became a W3C Recommendation on February 10, 1998.

Sources

XML is a profile of an ISO standard SGML, and most of XML comes from SGML unchanged. From SGML comes the separation of logical and physical structures (elements and entities), the availability of grammar-based validation (DTDs), the separation of data and metadata (elements and attributes), mixed content, the separation of processing from representation (processing instructions), and the default angle-bracket syntax. The SGML declaration was removed; thus XML has a fixed delimiter set and adopts Unicode as the document character set.

Other sources of technology for XML were the TEI (Text Encoding Initiative), which defined a profile of SGML for use as a "transfer syntax" and HTML. The ERCS(Extended Reference Concrete Syntax) project of the SPREAD (Standardization Project Regarding East Asian Documents) project of the ISO-related China/Japan/Korea Document Processing expert group was the basis of XML 1.0's naming rules; SPREAD also introduced hexadecimal numeric character references and the concept of references to make available all Unicode characters. To support ERCS, XML and HTML better, the SGML standard IS 8879 was revised in 1996 and 1998 with WebSGML Adaptations.

Ideas that developed during discussion that are novel in XML included the algorithm for encoding detection and the encoding header, the processing instruction target, the xml:space attribute, and the new close delimiter for empty-element tags. The notion of well-formedness as opposed to validity (which enables parsing without a schema) was first formalized in XML, although it had been implemented successfully in the Electronic Book Technology "Dynatext" software;[34] the software from the University of Waterloo New Oxford English Dictionary Project; the RISP LISP SGML text processor at Uniscope, Tokyo; the US Army Missile Command IADS hypertext system; Mentor Graphics Context; Interleaf and Xerox Publishing System.

Versions

1.0 and 1.1

The first (XML 1.0) was initially defined in 1998. It has undergone minor revisions since then, without being given a new version number, and is currently in its fifth edition, as published on November 26, 2008. It is widely implemented and still recommended for general use.

The second (XML 1.1) was initially published on February 4, 2004, the same day as XML 1.0 Third Edition,[35] and is currently in its second edition, as published on August 16, 2006. It contains features (some contentious) that are intended to make XML easier to use in certain cases.[36] The main changes are to enable the use of line-ending characters used on EBCDIC platforms, and the use of scripts and characters absent from Unicode 3.2. XML 1.1 is not very widely implemented and is recommended for use only by those who need its particular features.[37]

Prior to its fifth edition release, XML 1.0 differed from XML 1.1 in having stricter requirements for characters available for use in element and attribute names and unique identifiers: in the first four editions of XML 1.0 the characters were exclusively enumerated using a specific version of the Unicode standard (Unicode 2.0 to Unicode 3.2.) The fifth edition substitutes the mechanism of XML 1.1, which is more future-proof but reduces redundancy. The approach taken in the fifth edition of XML 1.0 and in all editions of XML 1.1 is that only certain characters are forbidden in names, and everything else is allowed to accommodate suitable name characters in future Unicode versions. In the fifth edition, XML names may contain characters in the Balinese, Cham, or Phoenician scripts among many others added to Unicode since Unicode 3.2.[36]

Almost any Unicode code point can be used in the character data and attribute values of an XML 1.0/1.1 document, even if the character corresponding to the code point is not defined in the current version of Unicode. In character data and attribute values, XML 1.1 allows the use of more control characters than XML 1.0, but, for "robustness", most of the control characters introduced in XML 1.1 must be expressed as numeric character references (and #x7F through #x9F, which had been allowed in XML 1.0, are in XML 1.1 even required to be expressed as numeric character references[38]). Among the supported control characters in XML 1.1 are two line break codes that must be treated as whitespace characters, which are the only control codes that can be written directly.

2.0

There has been discussion of an XML 2.0, although no organization has announced plans for work on such a project. XML-SW (SW for skunkworks), which one of the original developers of XML has written,[39] contains some proposals for what an XML 2.0 might look like, including elimination of DTDs from syntax, as well as integration of XML namespaces, XML Base and XML Information Set into the base standard.

Binary XML

The World Wide Web Consortium also has an XML Binary Characterization Working Group doing preliminary research into use cases and properties for a binary encoding of XML Information Set. The working group is not chartered to produce any official standards. Since XML is by definition text-based, ITU-T and ISO are using the name Fast Infoset for their own binary format (ITU-T Rec. X.891 and ISO/IEC 24824-1) to avoid confusion.

Criticism

XML and its extensions have regularly been criticized for verbosity, complexity and redundancy.[40]

Mapping the basic tree model of XML to type systems of programming languages or databases can be difficult, especially when XML is used for exchanging highly structured data between applications, which was not its primary design goal. However, XML data binding systems allow applications to access XML data directly from objects representing a data structure of the data in the programming language used, which ensures type safety, rather than using the DOM or SAX to retrieve data from a direct representation of the XML itself. This is accomplished by automatically creating a mapping between elements of the XML schema XSD of the document and members of a class to be represented in memory.

Other criticisms attempt to refute the claim that XML is a self-describing language[41] (though the XML specification itself makes no such claim).

JSON, YAML, and S-Expressions are frequently proposed as simpler alternatives (see Comparison of data serialization formats)[42] that focus on representing highly structured data rather than documents, which may contain both highly structured and relatively unstructured content. However, W3C standardized XML schema specifications offer a broader range of structured XSD data types compared to simpler serialization formats and offer modularity and reuse through XML namespaces.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ i.e., embedded quote characters would be a problem
  2. ^ A common example of this is CSS class or identifier names.

References

  1. ^ "XML Media Types, RFC 7303". Internet Engineering Task Force. July 2014.
  2. ^ "XML 1.0 Specification". World Wide Web Consortium. Retrieved 22 August 2010.
  3. ^ "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0". www.w3.org.
  4. ^ (PDF). Dblab.ntua.gr. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 April 2013. Retrieved 14 August 2016.
  5. ^ "W3C DOCUMENT LICENSE". W3.org. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  6. ^ a b "XML 1.0 Origin and Goals". W3.org. Retrieved 14 August 2016.
  7. ^ Fennell, Philip (June 2013). "Extremes of XML". XML London 2013: 80–86. doi:10.14337/XMLLondon13.Fennell01. ISBN 978-0-9926471-0-0.
  8. ^ a b c d e Dykes, Lucinda (2005). XML for Dummies (4th ed.). Hoboken, N.J.: Wiley. ISBN 978-0-7645-8845-7.
  9. ^ "XML Applications and Initiatives". Xml.coverages.org. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  10. ^ "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth Edition)". World Wide Web Consortium. 2008-11-26. Retrieved 23 November 2012.
  11. ^ "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.1 (Second Edition)". World Wide Web Consortium. Retrieved 22 August 2010.
  12. ^ "Characters vs. Bytes". Tbray.org. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  13. ^ "Autodetection of Character Encodings". W3.org. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  14. ^ "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth Edition)". W3.org. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  15. ^ "W3C I18N FAQ: HTML, XHTML, XML and Control Codes". W3.org. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  16. ^ "Extensible Markup Language (XML)". W3.org. Retrieved 16 November 2017. Section "Comments"
  17. ^ Pilgrim, Mark (2004). . Archived from the original on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 18 July 2013.
  18. ^ . DiveIntoMark.org. Archived from the original on 2011-05-14. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  19. ^ . Xmlnotepad/codeplex.com. Archived from the original on 15 November 2017. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  20. ^ "XML Notepad 2007". Microsoft.com. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  21. ^ DuCharme, Bob. "Push, Pull, Next!". Xml.com. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  22. ^ "XML Serialization in the .NET Framework". Msdn.microsoft.com. Retrieved 31 July 2009.
  23. ^ . Mozilla Developer Center. Mozilla Foundation. Archived from the original on 2011-05-01. Retrieved 2010-07-27.
  24. ^ "XML Shell: Core Syntax". Xmlsh.org. 2010-05-13. Retrieved 22 August 2010.
  25. ^ "Resource Description Framework (RDF): Concepts and Abstract Syntax". W3.org. Retrieved 22 August 2010.
  26. ^ "ISO/IEC 19757-3". ISO/IEC. 1 June 2006: vi. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  27. ^ Bray, Tim (February 2005). "A conversation with Tim Bray: Searching for ways to tame the world's vast stores of information". Association for Computing Machinery's "Queue site". Retrieved 16 April 2006.
  28. ^ Ambron, Sueann & Hooper, Kristina, eds. (1988). "Publishers, multimedia, and interactivity". Interactive multimedia. Cobb Group. ISBN 1-55615-124-1.
  29. ^ Eliot Kimber (2006). "XML is 10". Drmacros-xml-rants.blogspot.com. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  30. ^ The working group was originally called the "Editorial Review Board." The original members and seven who were added before the first edition was complete, are listed at the end of the first edition of the XML Recommendation, at http://www.w3.org/TR/1998/REC-xml-19980210.
  31. ^ "Reports From the W3C SGML ERB to the SGML WG And from the W3C XML ERB to the XML SIG". W3.org. Retrieved 31 July 2009.
  32. ^ "Oracle Technology Network for Java Developers - Oracle Technology Network - Oracle". Java.sun.com. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  33. ^ "Extensible Markup Language (XML)". W3.org. 1996-11-14. Retrieved 31 July 2009.
  34. ^ Jon Bosak; Sun Microsystems (2006-12-07). . 2006.xmlconference.org. Archived from the original on 2007-07-11. Retrieved 31 July 2009.
  35. ^ "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Third Edition)". W3.org. Retrieved 22 August 2010.
  36. ^ a b "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.1 (Second Edition) , Rationale and list of changes for XML 1.1". W3.org. Retrieved 20 January 2012.
  37. ^ Harold, Elliotte Rusty (2004). Effective XML. Addison-Wesley. pp. 10–19. ISBN 0-321-15040-6.
  38. ^ "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.1 (Second Edition)". W3.org. Retrieved 22 August 2010.
  39. ^ Bray, Tim (10 February 2002). "Extensible Markup Language, SW (XML-SW)".
  40. ^ "XML: The Angle Bracket Tax". Codinghorror.com. 11 May 2008. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  41. ^ "The Myth of Self-Describing XML" (PDF). Workflow.HealthBase.info. September 2003. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  42. ^ "What usable alternatives to XML syntax do you know?". StackOverflow.com. Retrieved 16 November 2017.

Further reading

  • Annex A of ISO 8879:1986 (SGML)
  • Lawrence A. Cunningham (2005). "Language, Deals and Standards: The Future of XML Contracts". Washington University Law Review. SSRN 900616.
  • Bosak, Jon; Bray, Tim (May 1999). . Scientific American. 280 (5): 89. Bibcode:1999SciAm.280e..89B. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0599-89. Archived from the original on 1 October 2009.
  • Kelly, Sean (February 6, 2006). "Making Mistakes with XML". Developer.com. Retrieved 26 October 2010.
  • St. Laurent, Simon (February 12, 2003). "Five Years Later, XML." O'Reilly XML Blog. O'Reilly Media. Retrieved 26 October 2010.
  • "W3C XML is Ten!". World Wide Web Consortium. 12 February 2008. Retrieved 26 October 2010.
  • (PDF). Course Slides. Pierre Geneves. October 2012. Archived from the original on 2015-10-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)

External links

  • W3C XML homepage
  • XML 1.0 Specification
  • Retrospective on Extended Reference Concrete Syntax 2019-11-18 at the Wayback Machine by Rick Jelliffe
  • XML, Java and the Future of the Web (1997) by Jon Bosak
  • http://validator.w3.org/ The Official [W3C] Markup Validation Service
  • The XML FAQ originally for the W3C's XML SIG by Peter Flynn

other, uses, disambiguation, extensible, markup, language, markup, language, file, format, storing, transmitting, reconstructing, arbitrary, data, defines, rules, encoding, documents, format, that, both, human, readable, machine, readable, world, wide, consort. For other uses see XML disambiguation Extensible Markup Language XML is a markup language and file format for storing transmitting and reconstructing arbitrary data It defines a set of rules for encoding documents in a format that is both human readable and machine readable The World Wide Web Consortium s XML 1 0 Specification 2 of 1998 3 and several other related specifications 4 all of them free open standards define XML 5 XML standard Extensible Markup LanguageAbbreviationXMLStatusPublished W3C recommendationYear started1996 27 years ago 1996 First publishedFebruary 10 1998 25 years ago 1998 02 10 Latest version1 1 2nd ed September 29 2006 16 years ago 2006 09 29 OrganizationWorld Wide Web Consortium W3C EditorsTim Bray Jean Paoli Michael Sperberg McQueen Eve Maler Francois Yergeau John W CowanBase standardsSGMLRelated standardsW3C XML SchemaDomainSerializationWebsitewww wbr w3 wbr org wbr xmlXML file format Filename extension xmlInternet media typeapplication xml text xml 1 Uniform Type Identifier UTI public xmlUTI conformationpublic textMagic number lt xmlDeveloped byWorld Wide Web ConsortiumType of formatMarkup languageExtended fromSGMLExtended toNumerous languages including XHTML RSS Atom and KMLStandard1 0 5th ed November 26 2008 2008 11 26 1 1 2nd ed August 16 2006 2006 08 16 Open format YesFree format YesThe design goals of XML emphasize simplicity generality and usability across the Internet 6 It is a textual data format with strong support via Unicode for different human languages Although the design of XML focuses on documents the language is widely used for the representation of arbitrary data structures 7 such as those used in web services Several schema systems exist to aid in the definition of XML based languages while programmers have developed many application programming interfaces APIs to aid the processing of XML data Contents 1 Overview 2 Applications 3 Key terminology 4 Characters and escaping 4 1 Valid characters 4 2 Encoding detection 4 3 Escaping 4 4 Comments 4 5 International use 5 Syntactical correctness and error handling 6 Schemas and validation 6 1 Document type definition 6 2 Schema 6 3 RELAX NG 6 4 Schematron 6 5 DSDL and other schema languages 7 Related specifications 8 Programming interfaces 8 1 Simple API for XML 8 2 Pull parsing 8 3 Document Object Model 8 4 Data binding 8 5 XML as data type 9 History 9 1 Sources 10 Versions 10 1 1 0 and 1 1 10 2 2 0 10 3 Binary XML 11 Criticism 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksOverview EditThe main purpose of XML is serialization i e storing transmitting and reconstructing arbitrary data For two disparate systems to exchange information they need to agree upon a file format XML standardizes this process It is therefore analogous to a lingua franca for representing information 8 1 As a markup language XML labels categorizes and structurally organizes information 8 11 XML tags represent the data structure and contain metadata What s within the tags is data encoded in the way the XML standard specifies 8 11 An additional XML schema XSD defines the necessary metadata for interpreting and validating XML This is also referred to as the canonical schema 8 135 An XML document that adheres to basic XML rules is well formed one that adheres to its schema is valid 8 135 IETF RFC 7303 which supersedes the older RFC 3023 provides rules for the construction of media types for use in XML message It defines three media types application xml text xml is an alias application xml external parsed entity text xml external parsed entity is an alias and application xml dtd They are used for transmitting raw XML files without exposing their internal semantics RFC 7303 further recommends that XML based languages be given media types ending in xml for example image svg xml for SVG Further guidelines for the use of XML in a networked context appear in RFC 3470 also known as IETF BCP 70 a document covering many aspects of designing and deploying an XML based language Applications EditXML has come into common use for the interchange of data over the Internet Hundreds of document formats using XML syntax have been developed 9 including RSS Atom Office Open XML OpenDocument SVG COLLADA and XHTML XML also provides the base language for communication protocols such as SOAP and XMPP It is the message exchange format for the Asynchronous JavaScript and XML AJAX programming technique Many industry data standards such as Health Level 7 OpenTravel Alliance FpML MISMO and National Information Exchange Model are based on XML and the rich features of the XML schema specification In publishing Darwin Information Typing Architecture is an XML industry data standard XML is used extensively to underpin various publishing formats Key terminology EditThe material in this section is based on the XML Specification This is not an exhaustive list of all the constructs that appear in XML it provides an introduction to the key constructs most often encountered in day to day use Character An XML document is a string of characters Every legal Unicode character except Null may appear in an 1 1 XML document while some are discouraged Processor and application The processor analyzes the markup and passes structured information to an application The specification places requirements on what an XML processor must do and not do but the application is outside its scope The processor as the specification calls it is often referred to colloquially as an XML parser Markup and content The characters making up an XML document are divided into markup and content which may be distinguished by the application of simple syntactic rules Generally strings that constitute markup either begin with the character lt and end with a gt or they begin with the character amp and end with a Strings of characters that are not markup are content However in a CDATA section the delimiters lt CDATA and gt are classified as markup while the text between them is classified as content In addition whitespace before and after the outermost element is classified as markup Tag A tag is a markup construct that begins with lt and ends with gt There are three types of tag start tag such as lt section gt end tag such as lt section gt empty element tag such as lt line break gt Element An element is a logical document component that either begins with a start tag and ends with a matching end tag or consists only of an empty element tag The characters between the start tag and end tag if any are the element s content and may contain markup including other elements which are called child elements An example is lt greeting gt Hello world lt greeting gt Another is lt line break gt Attribute An attribute is a markup construct consisting of a name value pair that exists within a start tag or empty element tag An example is lt img src madonna jpg alt Madonna gt where the names of the attributes are src and alt and their values are madonna jpg and Madonna respectively Another example is lt step number 3 gt Connect A to B lt step gt where the name of the attribute is number and its value is 3 An XML attribute can only have a single value and each attribute can appear at most once on each element In the common situation where a list of multiple values is desired this must be done by encoding the list into a well formed XML attribute i with some format beyond what XML defines itself Usually this is either a comma or semi colon delimited list or if the individual values are known not to contain spaces ii a space delimited list can be used lt div class inner greeting box gt Welcome lt div gt where the attribute class has both the value inner greeting box and also indicates the two CSS class names inner and greeting box XML declaration XML documents may begin with an XML declaration that describes some information about themselves An example is lt xml version 1 0 encoding UTF 8 gt Characters and escaping EditXML documents consist entirely of characters from the Unicode repertoire Except for a small number of specifically excluded control characters any character defined by Unicode may appear within the content of an XML document XML includes facilities for identifying the encoding of the Unicode characters that make up the document and for expressing characters that for one reason or another cannot be used directly Valid characters Edit Main article Valid characters in XML Unicode code points in the following ranges are valid in XML 1 0 documents 10 U 0009 Horizontal Tab U 000A Line Feed U 000D Carriage Return these are the only C0 controls accepted in XML 1 0 U 0020 U D7FF U E000 U FFFD this excludes some noncharacters in the BMP all surrogates U FFFE and U FFFF are forbidden U 10000 U 10FFFF this includes all code points in supplementary planes including noncharacters XML 1 1 extends the set of allowed characters to include all the above plus the remaining characters in the range U 0001 U 001F 11 At the same time however it restricts the use of C0 and C1 control characters other than U 0009 Horizontal Tab U 000A Line Feed U 000D Carriage Return and U 0085 Next Line by requiring them to be written in escaped form for example U 0001 must be written as amp x01 or its equivalent In the case of C1 characters this restriction is a backwards incompatibility it was introduced to allow common encoding errors to be detected The code point U 0000 Null is the only character that is not permitted in any XML 1 1 document Encoding detection Edit The Unicode character set can be encoded into bytes for storage or transmission in a variety of different ways called encodings Unicode itself defines encodings that cover the entire repertoire well known ones include UTF 8 which the XML standard recommends using without a BOM and UTF 16 12 There are many other text encodings that predate Unicode such as ASCII and various ISO IEC 8859 their character repertoires are in every case subsets of the Unicode character set XML allows the use of any of the Unicode defined encodings and any other encodings whose characters also appear in Unicode XML also provides a mechanism whereby an XML processor can reliably without any prior knowledge determine which encoding is being used 13 Encodings other than UTF 8 and UTF 16 are not necessarily recognized by every XML parser and in some cases not even UTF 16 even though the standard mandates it to also be recognized Escaping Edit XML provides escape facilities for including characters that are problematic to include directly For example The characters lt and amp are key syntax markers and may never appear in content outside a CDATA section It is allowed but not recommended to use lt in XML entity values 14 Some character encodings support only a subset of Unicode For example it is legal to encode an XML document in ASCII but ASCII lacks code points for Unicode characters such as e It might not be possible to type the character on the author s machine Some characters have glyphs that cannot be visually distinguished from other characters such as the nonbreaking space amp xa0 and the space amp x20 and the Cyrillic capital letter A amp x410 A and the Latin capital letter A amp x41 A There are five predefined entities amp lt represents lt amp gt represents gt amp amp represents amp amp apos represents amp quot represents All permitted Unicode characters may be represented with a numeric character reference Consider the Chinese character 中 whose numeric code in Unicode is hexadecimal 4E2D or decimal 20 013 A user whose keyboard offers no method for entering this character could still insert it in an XML document encoded either as amp 20013 or amp x4e2d Similarly the string I lt 3 Jorg could be encoded for inclusion in an XML document as I amp lt 3 J amp xF6 rg amp 0 is not permitted because the null character is one of the control characters excluded from XML even when using a numeric character reference 15 An alternative encoding mechanism such as Base64 is needed to represent such characters Comments Edit Comments may appear anywhere in a document outside other markup Comments cannot appear before the XML declaration Comments begin with lt and end with gt For compatibility with SGML the string double hyphen is not allowed inside comments 16 this means comments cannot be nested The ampersand has no special significance within comments so entity and character references are not recognized as such and there is no way to represent characters outside the character set of the document encoding An example of a valid comment lt no need to escape lt code gt amp such in comments gt International use Edit This example contains Armenian text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Armenian letters XML 1 0 Fifth Edition and XML 1 1 support the direct use of almost any Unicode character in element names attributes comments character data and processing instructions other than the ones that have special symbolic meaning in XML itself such as the less than sign lt The following is a well formed XML document including Chinese Armenian and Cyrillic characters lt xml version 1 0 encoding UTF 8 gt lt 俄语 լեզու ռուսերեն gt dannye lt 俄语 gt Syntactical correctness and error handling EditMain article Well formed document The XML specification defines an XML document as a well formed text meaning that it satisfies a list of syntax rules provided in the specification Some key points in the fairly lengthy list include The document contains only properly encoded legal Unicode characters None of the special syntax characters such as lt and amp appear except when performing their markup delineation roles The start tag end tag and empty element tag that delimit elements are correctly nested with none missing and none overlapping Tag names are case sensitive the start tag and end tag must match exactly Tag names cannot contain any of the characters amp lt gt nor a space character and cannot begin with or a numeric digit A single root element contains all the other elements The definition of an XML document excludes texts that contain violations of well formedness rules they are simply not XML An XML processor that encounters such a violation is required to report such errors and to cease normal processing This policy occasionally referred to as draconian error handling stands in notable contrast to the behavior of programs that process HTML which are designed to produce a reasonable result even in the presence of severe markup errors 17 XML s policy in this area has been criticized as a violation of Postel s law Be conservative in what you send be liberal in what you accept 18 The XML specification defines a valid XML document as a well formed XML document which also conforms to the rules of a Document Type Definition DTD 19 20 Schemas and validation EditIn addition to being well formed an XML document may be valid This means that it contains a reference to a Document Type Definition DTD and that its elements and attributes are declared in that DTD and follow the grammatical rules for them that the DTD specifies XML processors are classified as validating or non validating depending on whether or not they check XML documents for validity A processor that discovers a validity error must be able to report it but may continue normal processing A DTD is an example of a schema or grammar Since the initial publication of XML 1 0 there has been substantial work in the area of schema languages for XML Such schema languages typically constrain the set of elements that may be used in a document which attributes may be applied to them the order in which they may appear and the allowable parent child relationships Document type definition Edit Main article Document type definition The oldest schema language for XML is the document type definition DTD inherited from SGML DTDs have the following benefits DTD support is ubiquitous due to its inclusion in the XML 1 0 standard DTDs are terse compared to element based schema languages and consequently present more information in a single screen DTDs allow the declaration of standard public entity sets for publishing characters DTDs define a document type rather than the types used by a namespace thus grouping all constraints for a document in a single collection DTDs have the following limitations They have no explicit support for newer features of XML most importantly namespaces They lack expressiveness XML DTDs are simpler than SGML DTDs and there are certain structures that cannot be expressed with regular grammars DTDs only support rudimentary datatypes They lack readability DTD designers typically make heavy use of parameter entities which behave essentially as textual macros which make it easier to define complex grammars but at the expense of clarity They use a syntax based on regular expression syntax inherited from SGML to describe the schema Typical XML APIs such as SAX do not attempt to offer applications a structured representation of the syntax so it is less accessible to programmers than an element based syntax may be Two peculiar features that distinguish DTDs from other schema types are the syntactic support for embedding a DTD within XML documents and for defining entities which are arbitrary fragments of text or markup that the XML processor inserts in the DTD itself and in the XML document wherever they are referenced like character escapes DTD technology is still used in many applications because of its ubiquity Schema Edit Main article XML Schema W3C A newer schema language described by the W3C as the successor of DTDs is XML Schema often referred to by the initialism for XML Schema instances XSD XML Schema Definition XSDs are far more powerful than DTDs in describing XML languages They use a rich datatyping system and allow for more detailed constraints on an XML document s logical structure XSDs also use an XML based format which makes it possible to use ordinary XML tools to help process them xs schema element that defines a schema lt xml version 1 0 encoding UTF 8 gt lt xs schema xmlns xs http www w3 org 2001 XMLSchema gt lt xs schema gt RELAX NG Edit RELAX NG Regular Language for XML Next Generation was initially specified by OASIS and is now a standard Part 2 Regular grammar based validation of ISO IEC 19757 DSDL RELAX NG schemas may be written in either an XML based syntax or a more compact non XML syntax the two syntaxes are isomorphic and James Clark s conversion tool Trang can convert between them without loss of information RELAX NG has a simpler definition and validation framework than XML Schema making it easier to use and implement It also has the ability to use datatype framework plug ins a RELAX NG schema author for example can require values in an XML document to conform to definitions in XML Schema Datatypes Schematron Edit Schematron is a language for making assertions about the presence or absence of patterns in an XML document It typically uses XPath expressions Schematron is now a standard Part 3 Rule based validation of ISO IEC 19757 DSDL DSDL and other schema languages Edit DSDL Document Schema Definition Languages is a multi part ISO IEC standard ISO IEC 19757 that brings together a comprehensive set of small schema languages each targeted at specific problems DSDL includes RELAX NG full and compact syntax Schematron assertion language and languages for defining datatypes character repertoire constraints renaming and entity expansion and namespace based routing of document fragments to different validators DSDL schema languages do not have the vendor support of XML Schemas yet and are to some extent a grassroots reaction of industrial publishers to the lack of utility of XML Schemas for publishing Some schema languages not only describe the structure of a particular XML format but also offer limited facilities to influence processing of individual XML files that conform to this format DTDs and XSDs both have this ability they can for instance provide the infoset augmentation facility and attribute defaults RELAX NG and Schematron intentionally do not provide these Related specifications EditA cluster of specifications closely related to XML have been developed starting soon after the initial publication of XML 1 0 It is frequently the case that the term XML is used to refer to XML together with one or more of these other technologies that have come to be seen as part of the XML core XML namespaces enable the same document to contain XML elements and attributes taken from different vocabularies without any naming collisions occurring Although XML Namespaces are not part of the XML specification itself virtually all XML software also supports XML Namespaces XML Base defines the xml base attribute which may be used to set the base for resolution of relative URI references within the scope of a single XML element XML Information Set or XML Infoset is an abstract data model for XML documents in terms of information items The infoset is commonly used in the specifications of XML languages for convenience in describing constraints on the XML constructs those languages allow XSL Extensible Stylesheet Language is a family of languages used to transform and render XML documents split into three parts XSLT XSL Transformations an XML language for transforming XML documents into other XML documents or other formats such as HTML plain text or XSL FO XSLT is very tightly coupled with XPath which it uses to address components of the input XML document mainly elements and attributes XSL FO XSL Formatting Objects an XML language for rendering XML documents often used to generate PDFs XPath XML Path Language a non XML language for addressing the components elements attributes and so on of an XML document XPath is widely used in other core XML specifications and in programming libraries for accessing XML encoded data XQuery XML Query is an XML query language strongly rooted in XPath and XML Schema It provides methods to access manipulate and return XML and is mainly conceived as a query language for XML databases XML Signature defines syntax and processing rules for creating digital signatures on XML content XML Encryption defines syntax and processing rules for encrypting XML content XML model Part 11 Schema Association of ISO IEC 19757 DSDL defines a means of associating any xml document with any of the schema types mentioned above Some other specifications conceived as part of the XML Core have failed to find wide adoption including XInclude XLink and XPointer Programming interfaces EditThe design goals of XML include It shall be easy to write programs which process XML documents 6 Despite this the XML specification contains almost no information about how programmers might go about doing such processing The XML Infoset specification provides a vocabulary to refer to the constructs within an XML document but does not provide any guidance on how to access this information A variety of APIs for accessing XML have been developed and used and some have been standardized Existing APIs for XML processing tend to fall into these categories Stream oriented APIs accessible from a programming language for example SAX and StAX Tree traversal APIs accessible from a programming language for example DOM XML data binding which provides an automated translation between an XML document and programming language objects Declarative transformation languages such as XSLT and XQuery Syntax extensions to general purpose programming languages for example LINQ and Scala Stream oriented facilities require less memory and for certain tasks based on a linear traversal of an XML document are faster and simpler than other alternatives Tree traversal and data binding APIs typically require the use of much more memory but are often found more convenient for use by programmers some include declarative retrieval of document components via the use of XPath expressions XSLT is designed for declarative description of XML document transformations and has been widely implemented both in server side packages and Web browsers XQuery overlaps XSLT in its functionality but is designed more for searching of large XML databases Simple API for XML Edit Main article Simple API for XML Simple API for XML SAX is a lexical event driven API in which a document is read serially and its contents are reported as callbacks to various methods on a handler object of the user s design SAX is fast and efficient to implement but difficult to use for extracting information at random from the XML since it tends to burden the application author with keeping track of what part of the document is being processed It is better suited to situations in which certain types of information are always handled the same way no matter where they occur in the document Pull parsing Edit Pull parsing treats the document as a series of items read in sequence using the iterator design pattern This allows for writing of recursive descent parsers in which the structure of the code performing the parsing mirrors the structure of the XML being parsed and intermediate parsed results can be used and accessed as local variables within the functions performing the parsing or passed down as function parameters into lower level functions or returned as function return values to higher level functions 21 Examples of pull parsers include Data Edit Xml in Perl StAX in the Java programming language XMLPullParser in Smalltalk XMLReader in PHP ElementTree iterparse in Python System Xml XmlReader in the NET Framework and the DOM traversal API NodeIterator and TreeWalker A pull parser creates an iterator that sequentially visits the various elements attributes and data in an XML document Code that uses this iterator can test the current item to tell for example whether it is a start tag or end tag or text and inspect its attributes local name namespace values of XML attributes value of text etc and can also move the iterator to the next item The code can thus extract information from the document as it traverses it The recursive descent approach tends to lend itself to keeping data as typed local variables in the code doing the parsing while SAX for instance typically requires a parser to manually maintain intermediate data within a stack of elements that are parent elements of the element being parsed Pull parsing code can be more straightforward to understand and maintain than SAX parsing code Document Object Model Edit Main article Document Object Model Document Object Model DOM is an API that allows for navigation of the entire document as if it were a tree of node objects representing the document s contents A DOM document can be created by a parser or can be generated manually by users with limitations Data types in DOM nodes are abstract implementations provide their own programming language specific bindings DOM implementations tend to be memory intensive as they generally require the entire document to be loaded into memory and constructed as a tree of objects before access is allowed Data binding Edit XML data binding is a powerful technique for simplifying the development of applications that need to work with XML documents This technique involves mapping the XML document to a hierarchy of strongly typed objects rather than using the generic objects created by a DOM parser The resulting code is often easier to read and maintain and it can help to identify problems at compile time rather than run time XML data binding is particularly well suited for applications where the document structure is known and fixed at the time the application is written By creating a strongly typed representation of the XML data developers can take advantage of modern integrated development environments IDEs that provide features like auto complete code refactoring and code highlighting This can make it easier to write correct and efficient code and reduce the risk of errors and bugs Overall XML data binding is a powerful technique for building robust and maintainable applications that work with XML data Example data binding systems include the Java Architecture for XML Binding JAXB XML Serialization in NET Framework 22 and XML serialization in gSOAP XML as data type Edit XML has appeared as a first class data type in other languages The ECMAScript for XML E4X extension to the ECMAScript JavaScript language explicitly defines two specific objects XML and XMLList for JavaScript which support XML document nodes and XML node lists as distinct objects and use a dot notation specifying parent child relationships 23 E4X is supported by the Mozilla 2 5 browsers though now deprecated and Adobe Actionscript but has not been adopted more universally Similar notations are used in Microsoft s LINQ implementation for Microsoft NET 3 5 and above and in Scala which uses the Java VM The open source xmlsh application which provides a Linux like shell with special features for XML manipulation similarly treats XML as a data type using the lt gt notation 24 The Resource Description Framework defines a data type rdf XMLLiteral to hold wrapped canonical XML 25 Facebook has produced extensions to the PHP and JavaScript languages that add XML to the core syntax in a similar fashion to E4X namely XHP and JSX respectively History EditXML is an application profile of SGML ISO 8879 26 The versatility of SGML for dynamic information display was understood by early digital media publishers in the late 1980s prior to the rise of the Internet 27 28 By the mid 1990s some practitioners of SGML had gained experience with the then new World Wide Web and believed that SGML offered solutions to some of the problems the Web was likely to face as it grew Dan Connolly added SGML to the list of W3C s activities when he joined the staff in 1995 work began in mid 1996 when Sun Microsystems engineer Jon Bosak developed a charter and recruited collaborators Bosak was well connected in the small community of people who had experience both in SGML and the Web 29 XML was compiled by a working group of eleven members 30 supported by a roughly 150 member Interest Group Technical debate took place on the Interest Group mailing list and issues were resolved by consensus or when that failed majority vote of the Working Group A record of design decisions and their rationales was compiled by Michael Sperberg McQueen on December 4 1997 31 James Clark served as Technical Lead of the Working Group notably contributing the empty element lt empty gt syntax and the name XML Other names that had been put forward for consideration included MAGMA Minimal Architecture for Generalized Markup Applications SLIM Structured Language for Internet Markup and MGML Minimal Generalized Markup Language The co editors of the specification were originally Tim Bray and Michael Sperberg McQueen Halfway through the project Bray accepted a consulting engagement with Netscape provoking vociferous protests from Microsoft Bray was temporarily asked to resign the editorship This led to intense dispute in the Working Group eventually solved by the appointment of Microsoft s Jean Paoli as a third co editor The XML Working Group communicated primarily through email and weekly teleconferences The major design decisions were reached in a short burst of intense work between August and November 1996 32 when the first Working Draft of an XML specification was published 33 Further design work continued through 1997 and XML 1 0 became a W3C Recommendation on February 10 1998 Sources Edit XML is a profile of an ISO standard SGML and most of XML comes from SGML unchanged From SGML comes the separation of logical and physical structures elements and entities the availability of grammar based validation DTDs the separation of data and metadata elements and attributes mixed content the separation of processing from representation processing instructions and the default angle bracket syntax The SGML declaration was removed thus XML has a fixed delimiter set and adopts Unicode as the document character set Other sources of technology for XML were the TEI Text Encoding Initiative which defined a profile of SGML for use as a transfer syntax and HTML The ERCS Extended Reference Concrete Syntax project of the SPREAD Standardization Project Regarding East Asian Documents project of the ISO related China Japan Korea Document Processing expert group was the basis of XML 1 0 s naming rules SPREAD also introduced hexadecimal numeric character references and the concept of references to make available all Unicode characters To support ERCS XML and HTML better the SGML standard IS 8879 was revised in 1996 and 1998 with WebSGML Adaptations Ideas that developed during discussion that are novel in XML included the algorithm for encoding detection and the encoding header the processing instruction target the xml space attribute and the new close delimiter for empty element tags The notion of well formedness as opposed to validity which enables parsing without a schema was first formalized in XML although it had been implemented successfully in the Electronic Book Technology Dynatext software 34 the software from the University of Waterloo New Oxford English Dictionary Project the RISP LISP SGML text processor at Uniscope Tokyo the US Army Missile Command IADS hypertext system Mentor Graphics Context Interleaf and Xerox Publishing System Versions Edit1 0 and 1 1 Edit The first XML 1 0 was initially defined in 1998 It has undergone minor revisions since then without being given a new version number and is currently in its fifth edition as published on November 26 2008 It is widely implemented and still recommended for general use The second XML 1 1 was initially published on February 4 2004 the same day as XML 1 0 Third Edition 35 and is currently in its second edition as published on August 16 2006 It contains features some contentious that are intended to make XML easier to use in certain cases 36 The main changes are to enable the use of line ending characters used on EBCDIC platforms and the use of scripts and characters absent from Unicode 3 2 XML 1 1 is not very widely implemented and is recommended for use only by those who need its particular features 37 Prior to its fifth edition release XML 1 0 differed from XML 1 1 in having stricter requirements for characters available for use in element and attribute names and unique identifiers in the first four editions of XML 1 0 the characters were exclusively enumerated using a specific version of the Unicode standard Unicode 2 0 to Unicode 3 2 The fifth edition substitutes the mechanism of XML 1 1 which is more future proof but reduces redundancy The approach taken in the fifth edition of XML 1 0 and in all editions of XML 1 1 is that only certain characters are forbidden in names and everything else is allowed to accommodate suitable name characters in future Unicode versions In the fifth edition XML names may contain characters in the Balinese Cham or Phoenician scripts among many others added to Unicode since Unicode 3 2 36 Almost any Unicode code point can be used in the character data and attribute values of an XML 1 0 1 1 document even if the character corresponding to the code point is not defined in the current version of Unicode In character data and attribute values XML 1 1 allows the use of more control characters than XML 1 0 but for robustness most of the control characters introduced in XML 1 1 must be expressed as numeric character references and x7F through x9F which had been allowed in XML 1 0 are in XML 1 1 even required to be expressed as numeric character references 38 Among the supported control characters in XML 1 1 are two line break codes that must be treated as whitespace characters which are the only control codes that can be written directly 2 0 Edit There has been discussion of an XML 2 0 although no organization has announced plans for work on such a project XML SW SW for skunkworks which one of the original developers of XML has written 39 contains some proposals for what an XML 2 0 might look like including elimination of DTDs from syntax as well as integration of XML namespaces XML Base and XML Information Set into the base standard Binary XML Edit The World Wide Web Consortium also has an XML Binary Characterization Working Group doing preliminary research into use cases and properties for a binary encoding of XML Information Set The working group is not chartered to produce any official standards Since XML is by definition text based ITU T and ISO are using the name Fast Infoset for their own binary format ITU T Rec X 891 and ISO IEC 24824 1 to avoid confusion Criticism EditXML and its extensions have regularly been criticized for verbosity complexity and redundancy 40 Mapping the basic tree model of XML to type systems of programming languages or databases can be difficult especially when XML is used for exchanging highly structured data between applications which was not its primary design goal However XML data binding systems allow applications to access XML data directly from objects representing a data structure of the data in the programming language used which ensures type safety rather than using the DOM or SAX to retrieve data from a direct representation of the XML itself This is accomplished by automatically creating a mapping between elements of the XML schema XSD of the document and members of a class to be represented in memory Other criticisms attempt to refute the claim that XML is a self describing language 41 though the XML specification itself makes no such claim JSON YAML and S Expressions are frequently proposed as simpler alternatives see Comparison of data serialization formats 42 that focus on representing highly structured data rather than documents which may contain both highly structured and relatively unstructured content However W3C standardized XML schema specifications offer a broader range of structured XSD data types compared to simpler serialization formats and offer modularity and reuse through XML namespaces See also EditList of XML markup languages List of XML schemas Extensible programming CAMX Comparison of data serialization formats Binary XML EBML WBXML XML ProtocolNotes Edit i e embedded quote characters would be a problem A common example of this is CSS class or identifier names References Edit XML Media Types RFC 7303 Internet Engineering Task Force July 2014 XML 1 0 Specification World Wide Web Consortium Retrieved 22 August 2010 Extensible Markup Language XML 1 0 www w3 org XML and Semantic Web W3C Standards Timeline PDF Dblab ntua gr Archived from the original PDF on 24 April 2013 Retrieved 14 August 2016 W3C DOCUMENT LICENSE W3 org Retrieved 24 July 2020 a b XML 1 0 Origin and Goals W3 org Retrieved 14 August 2016 Fennell Philip June 2013 Extremes of XML XML London 2013 80 86 doi 10 14337 XMLLondon13 Fennell01 ISBN 978 0 9926471 0 0 a b c d e Dykes Lucinda 2005 XML for Dummies 4th ed Hoboken N J Wiley ISBN 978 0 7645 8845 7 XML Applications and Initiatives Xml coverages org Retrieved 16 November 2017 Extensible Markup Language XML 1 0 Fifth Edition World Wide Web Consortium 2008 11 26 Retrieved 23 November 2012 Extensible Markup Language XML 1 1 Second Edition World Wide Web Consortium Retrieved 22 August 2010 Characters vs Bytes Tbray org Retrieved 16 November 2017 Autodetection of Character Encodings W3 org Retrieved 16 November 2017 Extensible Markup Language XML 1 0 Fifth Edition W3 org Retrieved 16 November 2017 W3C I18N FAQ HTML XHTML XML and Control Codes W3 org Retrieved 16 November 2017 Extensible Markup Language XML W3 org Retrieved 16 November 2017 Section Comments Pilgrim Mark 2004 The history of draconian error handling in XML Archived from the original on 2011 07 26 Retrieved 18 July 2013 There are No Exceptions to Postel s Law dive into mark DiveIntoMark org Archived from the original on 2011 05 14 Retrieved 22 April 2013 XML Notepad Xmlnotepad codeplex com Archived from the original on 15 November 2017 Retrieved 16 November 2017 XML Notepad 2007 Microsoft com Retrieved 16 November 2017 DuCharme Bob Push Pull Next Xml com Retrieved 16 November 2017 XML Serialization in the NET Framework Msdn microsoft com Retrieved 31 July 2009 Processing XML with E4X Mozilla Developer Center Mozilla Foundation Archived from the original on 2011 05 01 Retrieved 2010 07 27 XML Shell Core Syntax Xmlsh org 2010 05 13 Retrieved 22 August 2010 Resource Description Framework RDF Concepts and Abstract Syntax W3 org Retrieved 22 August 2010 ISO IEC 19757 3 ISO IEC 1 June 2006 vi a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Bray Tim February 2005 A conversation with Tim Bray Searching for ways to tame the world s vast stores of information Association for Computing Machinery s Queue site Retrieved 16 April 2006 Ambron Sueann amp Hooper Kristina eds 1988 Publishers multimedia and interactivity Interactive multimedia Cobb Group ISBN 1 55615 124 1 Eliot Kimber 2006 XML is 10 Drmacros xml rants blogspot com Retrieved 16 November 2017 The working group was originally called the Editorial Review Board The original members and seven who were added before the first edition was complete are listed at the end of the first edition of the XML Recommendation at http www w3 org TR 1998 REC xml 19980210 Reports From the W3C SGML ERB to the SGML WG And from the W3C XML ERB to the XML SIG W3 org Retrieved 31 July 2009 Oracle Technology Network for Java Developers Oracle Technology Network Oracle Java sun com Retrieved 16 November 2017 Extensible Markup Language XML W3 org 1996 11 14 Retrieved 31 July 2009 Jon Bosak Sun Microsystems 2006 12 07 Closing Keynote XML 2006 2006 xmlconference org Archived from the original on 2007 07 11 Retrieved 31 July 2009 Extensible Markup Language XML 1 0 Third Edition W3 org Retrieved 22 August 2010 a b Extensible Markup Language XML 1 1 Second Edition Rationale and list of changes for XML 1 1 W3 org Retrieved 20 January 2012 Harold Elliotte Rusty 2004 Effective XML Addison Wesley pp 10 19 ISBN 0 321 15040 6 Extensible Markup Language XML 1 1 Second Edition W3 org Retrieved 22 August 2010 Bray Tim 10 February 2002 Extensible Markup Language SW XML SW XML The Angle Bracket Tax Codinghorror com 11 May 2008 Retrieved 16 November 2017 The Myth of Self Describing XML PDF Workflow HealthBase info September 2003 Retrieved 16 November 2017 What usable alternatives to XML syntax do you know StackOverflow com Retrieved 16 November 2017 Further reading EditAnnex A of ISO 8879 1986 SGML Lawrence A Cunningham 2005 Language Deals and Standards The Future of XML Contracts Washington University Law Review SSRN 900616 Bosak Jon Bray Tim May 1999 XML and the Second Generation Web Scientific American 280 5 89 Bibcode 1999SciAm 280e 89B doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0599 89 Archived from the original on 1 October 2009 Kelly Sean February 6 2006 Making Mistakes with XML Developer com Retrieved 26 October 2010 St Laurent Simon February 12 2003 Five Years Later XML O Reilly XML Blog O Reilly Media Retrieved 26 October 2010 W3C XML is Ten World Wide Web Consortium 12 February 2008 Retrieved 26 October 2010 Introduction to XML PDF Course Slides Pierre Geneves October 2012 Archived from the original on 2015 10 16 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to XML Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Subject XML W3C XML homepage XML 1 0 Specification Retrospective on Extended Reference Concrete Syntax Archived 2019 11 18 at the Wayback Machine by Rick Jelliffe XML Java and the Future of the Web 1997 by Jon Bosak http validator w3 org The Official W3C Markup Validation Service The XML FAQ originally for the W3C s XML SIG by Peter Flynn Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title XML amp oldid 1155641749, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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