XML – Overview

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XML stands for Extensible Markup Language and is a text-based markup language derived from Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML). This tutorial will teach you the basics of XML. The tutorial is divided into sections such as XML Basics, Advanced XML, and XML tools. Each of these sections contain related topics with simple and useful examples.

Audience

This reference has been prepared for beginners to help them understand the basic to advanced concepts related to XML. This tutorial will give you enough understanding on XML from where you can take yourself to a higher level of expertise.

XML – Overview

XML stands for Extensible Markup Language. It is a text-based markup language derived from Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML).

XML tags identify the data and are used to store and organize the data, rather than specifying how to display it like HTML tags, which are used to display the data. XML is not going to replace HTML in the near future, but it introduces new possibilities by adopting many successful features of HTML.

There are three important characteristics of XML that make it useful in a variety of systems and solutions −

  • XML is extensible − XML allows you to create your own self-descriptive tags, or language, that suits your application.
  • XML carries the data, does not present it − XML allows you to store the data irrespective of how it will be presented.
  • XML is a public standard − XML was developed by an organization called the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) and is available as an open standard.

XML Usage

A short list of XML usage says it all −

  • XML can work behind the scene to simplify the creation of HTML documents for large web sites.
  • XML can be used to exchange the information between organizations and systems.
  • XML can be used for offloading and reloading of databases.
  • XML can be used to store and arrange the data, which can customize your data handling needs.
  • XML can easily be merged with style sheets to create almost any desired output.
  • Virtually, any type of data can be expressed as an XML document.

What is Markup?

XML is a markup language that defines set of rules for encoding documents in a format that is both human-readable and machine-readable. So what exactly is a markup language? Markup is information added to a document that enhances its meaning in certain ways, in that it identifies the parts and how they relate to each other. More specifically, a markup language is a set of symbols that can be placed in the text of a document to demarcate and label the parts of that document.

Following example shows how XML markup looks, when embedded in a piece of text −

<message>
   <text>Hello, world!</text>
</message>

This snippet includes the markup symbols, or the tags such as <message>…</message> and <text>… </text>. The tags <message> and </message> mark the start and the end of the XML code fragment. The tags <text> and </text> surround the text Hello, world!.

Is XML a Programming Language?

A programming language consists of grammar rules and its own vocabulary which is used to create computer programs. These programs instruct the computer to perform specific tasks. XML does not qualify to be a programming language as it does not perform any computation or algorithms. It is usually stored in a simple text file and is processed by special software that is capable of interpreting XML.

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