A Guide to XML - Script Review at ProgramsDB.com


  • Name
A Guide to XML
  • Author
A Guide to XML
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XML / Introduction to XML
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     This article provides a technical introduction to XML with an intention to guide the reader to appropriate sections of the XML specification when greater technical detail is desired. This introduction is intended for audience with some HTML or SGML knowledge, although The XML Link and XML Style specifications are also briefly outlined.


Top XML scripts
1).   XSLT/XPATH tutorial This article will help you achieve a working knowledge of XML/XSL/XPATH and XSLT and XPATH
2).   Extensible Markup Language (XML) and C# The .NET Framework uses XML extensively. The Framework Class Library (FCL) provides an extensive set of XML-related classes. Much of Visual Studio's internal implementation also employs XML. In this paper, we introduce XML, XML-related technologies and key classes for creating and manipulating XML documents.
3).   XLinks Linking in XML is divided into two parts, XLink and XPointers. XLink, the XML Linking Language, defines how one document links to another document. XPointer, the XML Pointer Language, defines how individual parts of a document are addressed. An XLink points to a URI (in practice, a URL) that specifies a particular resource. This URI may include an XPointer part that more specifically identifies the desired part or section of the targeted resource or document. This paper explores XLinks.
4).   Introduction to XML This tutorial show you what XML is all about. It is an important new technology that will revolutionize the web. There's no reason you can't start using XML to transform your business today
5).   Xml-Tutorial and the domain as sample The tutorial has a lot of entity-samples - and the domain exists as Xml/Xsl and as plain Html. A freeware-tool which creates the Html-version is downloadable (NET1.1 required).
6).   XPointers XPointer, the XML Pointer Language, defines an addressing scheme for individual parts of an XML document. These addresses can be used by any application that needs to identify parts of or locations in an XML document. For instance, an XML editor could use an XPointer to identify the current position of the insertion point or the range of the selection. An XInclude processor can use an XPointer to determine what part of a document to include. And the URI in an XLink can include an XPointer fragment identifier that locates one particular element in the targeted document. XPointers use the same XPath syntax that you're familiar with from XSL transformations to identify the parts of the document they point to, along with a few additional pieces.
7).   A Guide to XML This article provides an introduction to XML with an intention to guide the reader to appropriate sections of the XML specification when greater technical detail is desired.
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