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Tim Bray Says RELAX

twofish writes to tell us that Sun's Tim Bray (co-editor of XML and the XML namespace specifications) has posted a blog entry suggesting RELAX NG be used instead of the W3C XML Schema. From the blog: "W3C XML Schemas (XSD) suck. They are hard to read, hard to write, hard to understand, have interoperability problems, and are unable to describe lots of things you want to do all the time in XML. Schemas based on Relax NG, also known as ISO Standard 19757, are easy to write, easy to read, are backed by a rigorous formalism for interoperability, and can describe immensely more different XML constructs."

9 of 180 comments (clear)

  1. Couldn't agree more by antonyb · · Score: 5, Insightful
    My experience with XML Schema is exactly that; hard to write in the first place, hard to maintain, and regular interop problems between different implementations that make the theory of web services a practical nightmare (idrefs are the first example that spring to mind).


    On the other hand, RELAX NG "just works".

    (all IME of course...:)

    ant.

  2. I have to agree. by JanusFury · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Has anyone here ever tried to read an XML schema for anything relatively complex? It's a nightmare. RELAX looks much cleaner and more direct, which I wholeheartedly approve of.

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  3. Re:XML Totally Sucks - All of it! by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful
    While XML may have it's places (I've yet to encounter one in the commerical world), passing large amount of data is not one of them.

    Yeah, well I have to look at EDI every day. I'd switch to XML in a heartbeat if it were up to me.

    You picked some obvious strawmen to shoot down. XML isn't for building gigabyte databases (regardless of whether some people try to use it for that). It's for easily moving data between applications. If you think writing a flat text parser is easy, then you've never had to deal with nested data or escaped characters. Say what you will about XML, but it's nice to have one set standard that deals with all that, even if suboptimally, because I never want to write another ad-hoc parser for as long as I live. Been there, done that, have no desire to bother again.

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  4. XML uses a binary format by ClosedSource · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Of course ASCII (or UNICODE for that matter) is a binary standard as well. So special tools called text editors were created so that people could read it.

    There are more sophisticated binary standards that are more efficient than ASCII and it wouldn't take a lot of effort to create viewers/editors for them as well. Of course most markup documents would be significantly smaller if tags didn't have to be S-P-E-L-L-E-D O-U-T character by character. Each HTML tag could be encoded in just two bytes with lots of room to spare.

    It always fascinates me that we have no problem making customers use a new specialized tool like a browser, but it's taboo to use a non-ASCII tool for development. So we continue to structure our data as if it were going to be processed by a VT100.

  5. Re:One fix to XML I'd like to have... by nuzak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That feature is in SGML. In fact it can be even shorter than that, you can express an entire tag and its content with is optional). SGML even lets you change the angle brackets to anything else you want. You can make any SGML doc look like nothing you or anyone else has ever seen ... all part of the feature set.

    SGML is full of fun little hacks like that, and it was a pain in the ass to read. Omitting the tag name from the end tag makes it impossible to know you have an improperly closed tag til the end of the document, and then you have no idea which tag wasn't closed. And no, that wasn't a theoretical problem either, this became a real problem with giant SGML docs that used all the shortcuts.

    If you really hate XML's verbosity so much, realize that it was designed for easy reading, not easy writing. I whipped up my own xml mode in emacs and made '</' trigger an "electric-slash" behavior that closes the tag automatically. Not rocket science.

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  6. XML nightmare by rgaginol · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If XML Schema was a work colleague they would be Wally from Dilbert - it's not that things are impossible to do with it, it's just that the relative simple things become hard and the complex almost impossible. Due to the fact that almost anything is possible with XML schema with enough work (weeks, months years...) instead of just scrapping it, people keep at it doggedly despite the number of times we get bitten. I'd love to see the community move more completely to RELAX NG if it makes my life easier.

  7. Re:Great job, now to clean up XML itself by killjoe · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I believe you are looking for lisp. It's XML cleaned up, simplified and hulkified.

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  8. XML is like Electricity by SimHacker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's good for transmitting information/energy, but it's not good for storing it.

    -Don

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  9. I call this the LineOfView (as in PoV) Problem by Qbertino · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I call this the Line of View (as in PoV) or 'Horizon' Problem. The general problem is this: In XML we've got a standard that is universal for displaying n-dimensional structures in a basically 1-dimensional enviroment. (For the time being, we're ignoring that XML text ususally goes from left to right and top to bottom, making that something 2D to look at)
    The question now is: where do you draw the line of view? Along which line do I take my knife to cut open my n-dimensional structure to unravel it and flatten it out into a 1-dimesional string of characters? This is a problem that is impossible to solve satisfactory for all possible PoVs or - as I say - Lines of View, or better yet, Horizons to the structure. Will I unravel my DB of books by authors? By issues? By vendors? By publishers or by weight and size? ... At some point you will have to look at in which way you want to handle your stuff and which way you're going to unravel it. This will undoubtly influence on how much XML clutter you will have to construct. With XML it's the same as with databases: It/they will allways be pathetic crutches for us to latch on to the real work. Undispensable, but crutches nontheless.

    What I'm getting to is this: mapping n-dimensional stuff to 1-dimensional structures will allways suck one way or the other. It's just that with XML we all start agreeing upon in which way it's supposed to suck. I don't think that changing the Schema standard (or worse: introducing additional standards) will actually attack this hard problem. I have a strong suspicion that Relax NGs relief is illusional, short term and re-introduces downsides that XML Schema allready has takled with it's pesky and strict nature. For one it would be consistency with the View-Horizon once chosen all the way through the given data-structure. I don't know for shure - go test and find out - but I do know that universal serialization will allways come with downsides and RelaxNG (or any other schema) won't change that.

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