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  2. XML - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xml

    XML 1.0 (Fifth Edition) and XML 1.1 support the direct use of almost any Unicode character in element names, attributes, comments, character data, and processing instructions (other than the ones that have special symbolic meaning in XML itself, such as the less-than sign, "<").

  3. List of computing and IT abbreviations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_computing_and_IT...

    CS—Computer Science; CSE—Computer science and engineering; CSI—Common System Interface; ... XSD—XML Schema Definition; XSL—eXtensible Stylesheet Language;

  4. XML data binding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XML_data_binding

    XML data binding refers to a means of representing information in an XML document as a business object in computer memory. This allows applications to access the data in the XML from the object, rather than using the DOM or SAX to retrieve the data from a direct representation of the XML itself.

  5. Markup language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markup_language

    Example of RecipeML, a simple markup language based on XML for creating recipes. The markup can be converted programmatically for display into, for example, HTML , PDF or Rich Text Format . A markup language is a text-encoding system which specifies the structure and formatting of a document and potentially the relationships among its parts. [ 1 ]

  6. Canonicalization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canonicalization

    A Canonical XML document is by definition an XML document that is in XML Canonical form, defined by The Canonical XML specification. Briefly, canonicalization removes whitespace within tags, uses particular character encodings, sorts namespace references and eliminates redundant ones, removes XML and DOCTYPE declarations, and transforms ...

  7. Attribute (computing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attribute_(computing)

    In XML, an attribute is a markup construct consisting of a name/value pair that exists within a start-tag or empty-element tag. Markup languages, such as HTML and XML , use attributes to describe data and the formatting of data.

  8. Node (computer science) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Node_(computer_science)

    For example, a computer with internet access could be considered a child node of a node representing the internet. The inverse relationship is that of a parent node. If node C is a child of node A, then A is the parent node of C. Degree: the degree of a node is the number of children of the node.

  9. List of XML markup languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_XML_markup_languages

    xCBL: a collection of XML specifications for use in e-business. xCal: the XML-compliant representation of the iCalendar standard; XCES: an XML based standard to codify text corpus; XDI: sharing, linking, and synchronizing data using machine-readable structured documents that use an RDF vocabulary based on XRI structured identifiers