Celebrate the XML Decade
IdaAshley writes "IBM Systems Journal recently published an issue dedicated to XML's 10th anniversary. Take a look at XML application techniques, and general discussion of the technical, economic and even cultural effects of XML. Learn why XML has been successful, and what it would take for XML to continue its success."
Marketing to PHBs, mostly.
However here on earth a lot of people still hand-code the stuff. IMO a C-like syntax using nested {}s would've been better.
Take a look at XML application techniques, and general discussion of the technical, economic and even cultural effects of XML.
Cultural Effects? This is a spec for structuring data, not a Picasso.
The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
So we're officially stuck with this crap forever.
Yay! Lets party!
XML is for data interchange, nothing else. Unfortunately, it's being used for everything but.
- Adam L. Beberg - The Cosm Project - http://www.mithral.com/
Not all XML is readable by humans.
The formatting strings in Janus controls come to mind.
I have heard that the new Office format (XML) was pretty unreadable.
And what is with modding everything in this thread to zero.
emt 377 emt 4
vague semantics, confusing specifications, unwarranted complexity, standards proliferation, poor tools, and wildly inappropriate application. Not to mention rampant disregard for existing work in nearly every arena it entered. So the essence of XML is this: the problem it solves is not hard, and it does not solve the problem well.
The evaluation of an action as 'practical' . . . depends on what it is that one wishes to practice.
Someone put that in our Bugzilla quips a while back - it's still one of my favorites!
My conspiracy theory is that XML was secretly invented by Intel in order to require 3GHz processors for the simplest of tasks.