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The XML Metadata Interchange (XMI) is an Object Management Group (OMG) standard for exchanging metadata information via Extensible Markup Language (XML). It can be used for any metadata whose metamodel can be expressed in Meta-Object Facility (MOF), a platform-independent model (PIM). The most common use of XMI is as an interchange format for ...
XMI: an OMG standard for exchanging metadata information via XML. The most common use of XMI is as an interchange format for UML models; XML Encryption: a specification that defines how to encrypt the content of an XML element; XML Information Set: describing an abstract data model of an XML document in terms of a set of information items
MARCXML - a direct mapping of the MARC standard to XML syntax; METS - a schema for aggregating in a single XML file descriptive, administrative, and structural metadata about a digital object; MODS - a schema for a bibliographic element set and maintained by the Network Development and MARC Standards Office of the Library of Congress [6]
XMI – XML Metadata Interchange, an OMG metadata interchange standard; CWM models enable users to trace the lineage of data – CWM provides objects that describe where the data came from and when and how the data was created. Instances of the metamodel are exchanged via XML Metadata Interchange (XMI) documents.
RIF/ReqIF (Requirements Interchange Format) is an XML file format that can be used to exchange requirements, along with its associated metadata, between software tools from different vendors. The requirements exchange format also defines a workflow for transmitting the status of requirements between partners.
XML Metadata Interchange, a standard for exchanging metadata information; XMI, an ETF operated by Blackrock on the TSX; see List of Canadian exchange-traded funds; XMI (stock index), the AMEX Major Market Index; XM (aka XMI or XM 1), 2003, the first XM album by Porcupine Tree
UXF is a structured format described in 1998 and intended to encode, publish, access and exchange UML models. [1] More recent alternatives include XML Metadata Interchange [2] and OMG's Diagram Definition standard. [3]
A conversion from MOF specification models (M3-, M2-, or M1-Layer) to W3C XML and XSD are specified by the XMI (ISO/IEC 19503) specification. XMI is an XML-based exchange format for models. [1]: xi From MOF to Java™ there is the Java Metadata Interchange (JMI) specification by Java Community Process. [1]: xi