Chapter 7. Introduction to XML
If you are thinking about skipping this chapter, please reconsider. While you may never need to be an XML expert, the basic concepts covered here will illuminate why things are done the way they are in the world of web document authoring. Furthermore, if you “get” XML, you’ll understand the reasoning that influences all contemporary web design and related W3C Recommendations, from XHTML to CSS 2 and beyond.
XML (Extensible Markup Language) is a W3C standard for text document markup. It is not a language in itself (like HTML), but rather a set of rules for creating other markup languages. In other words, it is a meta-markup language. Languages written according to XML syntax are called XML applications (a confusing use of the word “application” to be sure, but such is the legacy jargon that SGML has left us). If this sounds a bit abstract, think of it this way: XML provides the tools for making up custom sets and subsets of tags.
Although XML began as an effort to improve information structure and handling on the Web, it has quickly taken the entire computing world by storm. In fact, today there is more XML used outside the Web than on it. XML is used for document sharing and data storage in fields as diverse as finance, retail, physics, travel, insurance, and academia, just to name a few. There are also XML files working behind the scenes in an increasing number of software applications, such as Microsoft Office, Macromedia Flash, and Apple iTunes. This ...
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