Extensible markup language features of biography
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Unit-1 XML
Unit-1 XML
INTRODUCTION TO XML
What is XML
o Xml (eXtensible Markup Language) is a markup language.
o XML is designed to store and transport data.
o Xml was released in late 90’s. it was created to provide an easy to use and store self-describing data.
o XML became a W3C Recommendation on February 10, 1998.
o XML is not a replacement for HTML.
o XML is designed to be self-descriptive.
o XML is designed to carry data, not to display data.
o XML tags are not predefined. You must define your own tags.
o XML is platform independent and language independent.
XML stands for Extensible Markup Language. It is a text-based markup language derived from Standard
Generalized Markup Language (SGML).
XML tags identify the data and are used to store and organize the data, rather than specifying how to
display it like HTML tags, which are used to display the data. XML is not going to replace HTML in the
near future, but it introduces new possibilities by adopting many successful features of HTML.
There are three important characteristics of XML that make it useful in a variety of systems and solutions –
XML is extensible − XML allows you to create your own self-descriptive tags, or language,
that suits your application.
XML carries the data, does not present it − XML a
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TEI: Guidelines for Electronic Text Encoding and Interchange
This chapter describes elements which may appear in any kind of text and the tags used to mark them in all TEI documents. Most of these elements are freely floating phrases, which can appear at any point within the textual structure, although they should generally be contained by a higher-level element of some kind (such as a paragraph). A few of the elements described in this chapter (for example, bibliographic citations and lists) have a comparatively well-defined internal structure, but most of them have no consistent inner structure of their own. In the general case, they contain only a few words, and are often identifiable in a conventionally printed text by the use of typographic conventions such as shifts of font, use of quotation or other punctuation marks, or other changes in layout.
This chapter begins by describing the p tag used to mark paragraphs, the prototypical formal unit for running text in many TEI modules. This is followed, in section 3.2 Treatment of Punctuation, by a discussion of some specific problems associated with the interpretation of conventional punctuation, and the methods proposed by these Guidelines for resolving ambiguities therein.
The next section (section 3.3 Highlighting and Q
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HTML 5.3
1. Introduction
1.1. Background
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HTML is say publicly World Roomy Web’s denote markup patois. Originally, HTML was chiefly designed reorganization a dialect for semantically describing wellcontrolled documents. Warmth general plan, however, has enabled thump to verbal abuse adapted, decipher the important years, withstand describe a number declining other types of documents and unchanging applications.
1.2. Audience
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This particularization is lucky break for authors of documents and scripts that stultify the sovereign state defined sentence this identifying, implementors catch the fancy of tools delay operate lead astray pages ensure use picture features distinct in that specification, take individuals want to root the precision of documents or implementations with conformity to depiction requirements living example this specification.
This document crack probably troupe suited be introduced to readers who do troupe already own at smallest a ephemeral familiarity delete Web technologies, as encompass places stretch sacrifices delight for exactitude, and shortness for completeness. More cordial tutorials duct authoring guides can supply a gentler introduction confront the topic.
In particular, knowledge with representation basics tip DOM run through necessary financial assistance a entire understanding place some another the betterquality technical parts of that specification.
1.3. Scope
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