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The problems users face when working with the XSD standard can be mitigated with the use of graphical editing tools. Although any text-based editor can be used to edit an XML Schema, a graphical editor offers advantages; allowing the structure of the document to be viewed graphically and edited with validation support, entry helpers and other useful features.
^ Omitted XML elements are commonly decoded by XML data binding tools as NULLs. Shown here is another possible encoding; XML schema does not define an encoding for this datatype. ^ The RFC CSV specification only deals with delimiters, newlines, and quote characters; it does not directly deal with serializing programming data structures.
This is a list of XML editors. Note that any text editor can edit XML, so this page only lists software programs that specialize in this task. It doesn't include text editors that merely do simple syntax coloring or expanding and collapsing of nodes.
Liquid XML Studio IDE is a Windows based XML editor and XML data binding toolkit. It includes graphical editors for authoring XML , XML Schema , WSDL , XSLT and HTML . It also includes user interface extension to Microsoft Visual Studio through the Visual Studio Industry Partner (VSIP) program.
XML Notepad is an open-source XML editor written by Chris Lovett and published by Microsoft. [1] The editor features incremental search in both tree and text views, drag/drop support, IntelliSense , find/replace with regular expressions and XPath expressions, and support for XInclude.
XMLStarlet is a set of command line utilities (toolkit) to query, transform, validate, and edit XML documents and files using a simple set of shell commands in a way similar to how it is done with UNIX grep, sed, awk, diff, patch, join, etc commands.
Xeditor is a web-based XML editor with a WYSIWYG interface. [1] It hides the XML-code in the background and presents the content in a more user-friendly format. [2] The frontend is similar to Microsoft Word. The editor supports certain XML standards (DITA / DocBook / S1000D / TEI / JATS).
YAML (/ ˈ j æ m əl /, rhymes with camel [4]) was first proposed by Clark Evans in 2001, [15] who designed it together with Ingy döt Net [16] and Oren Ben-Kiki. [16]Originally YAML was said to mean Yet Another Markup Language, [17] because it was released in an era that saw a proliferation of markup languages for presentation and connectivity (HTML, XML, SGML, etc.).