Introduction to XML

XML stands for eXtensible Markup Language.
XML was designed to store and transport data.
XML was designed to be both human- and machine-readable.
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Introduction to XML

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Introduction to XML


XML is a software- and hardware-independent tool for storing and transporting data.

What is XML?

XML stands for eXtensible Markup Language
XML is a markup language much like HTML
XML was designed to store and transport data
XML was designed to be self-descriptive
XML is a W3C Recommendation


XML Does Not DO Anything
Maybe it is a little hard to understand, but XML does not DO anything.
This note is a note to Tove from Jani, stored as XML:


<note>
 
<to>Tove</to>
 
<from>Jani</from>
 
<heading>Reminder</heading>
 
<body>Don't forget me this weekend!</body>
</note>


The XML above is quite self-descriptive:

It has sender information
It has receiver information
It has a heading
It has a message body

But still, the XML above does not DO anything. XML is just information wrapped in tags.
Someone must write a piece of software to send, receive, store, or display it:

Note
To: Tove
From: Jani
Reminder
Don't forget me this weekend!


The Difference Between XML and HTML
XML and HTML were designed with different goals:

XML was designed to carry data - with focus on what data is
HTML was designed to display data - with focus on how data looks
XML tags are not predefined like HTML tags are








XML Does Not Use Predefined Tags
The XML language has no predefined tags.
The tags in the example above (like <to> and <from>) are not defined in any XML standard. These tags are "invented" by the author of the XML document.
HTML works with predefined tags like <p>, <h1>, <table>, etc.
With XML, the author must define both the tags and the document structure.

XML is Extensible
Most XML applications will work as expected even if new data is added (or
removed).
Imagine an application designed to display the original version of note.xml
(<to> <from> <heading> <body>).
Then imagine a newer version of note.xml with added <date> and <hour>
elements, and a removed <heading>.
The way XML is constructed, older version of the application can still work:


<note>
 
<date>2015-09-01</date>  <hour>08:30</hour>  <to>Tove</to>
 
<from>Jani</from>
 
<body>Don't forget me this weekend!</body>
</note>




Old Version

Note
To: Tove
From: Jani
Reminder
Don't forget me this weekend!



New Version

Note
To: Tove
From: Jani
Date: 2015-09-01 08:30
Don't forget me this weekend!




XML Simplifies Things

XML simplifies data sharing
XML simplifies data transport
XML simplifies platform changes
XML simplifies data availability

Many computer systems contain data in incompatible formats. Exchanging data
between incompatible systems (or upgraded systems) is a time-consuming task
for web developers. Large amounts of data must be converted, and incompatible data is
often lost.
XML stores data in plain text format. This provides a software- and
hardware-independent way of storing, transporting, and sharing data.
XML also makes it easier to expand or upgrade to new operating systems, new
applications, or new browsers, without losing data.
With XML, data can be available to all kinds of "reading
machines" like people, computers, voice machines, news feeds, etc.

XML is a W3C Recommendation
XML became a W3C Recommendation as early as in February 1998.













+1

Reference: https://www.w3schools.com/xml/xml_whatis.asp
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