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The completed specification, known as "DOM Level 1", became a W3C Recommendation in late 1998. By 2005, large parts of W3C DOM were well-supported by common ECMAScript-enabled browsers, including Internet Explorer 6 (from 2001), Opera, Safari and Gecko-based browsers (like Mozilla, Firefox, SeaMonkey and Camino).
XHTML 1.0 was published as a W3C Recommendation on January 26, 2000, [60] and was later revised and republished on August 1, 2002. It offers the same three variations as HTML 4.0 and 4.01, reformulated in XML, with minor restrictions. XHTML 1.1 [61] was published as a W3C Recommendation on May 31, 2001. It is based on XHTML 1.0 Strict, but ...
The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) was founded in 1994 by Tim Berners-Lee after he left the European Organization for Nuclear Research in October 1994. [5] It was founded at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Laboratory for Computer Science with support from the European Commission, and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, which had pioneered the ARPANET, the most ...
On 16 September 2014, W3C moved HTML5 to Proposed Recommendation. [31] On 28 October 2014, HTML5 was released as a W3C Recommendation, [32] bringing the specification process to completion. [5] On 1 November 2016, HTML 5.1 was released as a W3C Recommendation. [33] On 14 December 2017, HTML 5.2 was released as a W3C Recommendation. [34]
XSLT 3.0: became a W3C Recommendation on 8 June 2017. The main new features are: [ 14 ] Streaming transformations : in previous versions the entire input document had to be read into memory before it could be processed, [ 15 ] and output could not be written until processing had finished.
World Wide Web Consortium#W3C recommendation (REC) To a section : This is a redirect from a topic that does not have its own page to a section of a page on the subject. For redirects to embedded anchors on a page, use {{ R to anchor }} instead .
The tutorials are divided into individual chapters on the development languages. In addition to the basics, application-related implementation options and examples, as well as a focus on individual elements of the programming language (so-called "references") are documented.
XSD 1.1 became a W3C Recommendation in April 2012, which means it is an approved W3C specification. Significant new features in XSD 1.1 are: The ability to define assertions against the document content by means of XPath 2.0 expressions (an idea borrowed from Schematron ).