Welcome to the "XML-RPC for PHP" Homepage. It is a library implementing the XML-RPC protocol, written in PHP. It is also known as PHPXMLRPC.
It is designed for ease of use, flexibility and completeness. Speed and reduced memory footprint are not the main goals of the project.
Note that this is not the same library as the one that is part of PEAR. They both share a common ancestry, since the PEAR version is a branch of the original phpxmlrpc library, now independently maintained.
This is not the library which can be compiled as an extension and has
[July 12, 2004] W3C Releases Public Working Draft for Full-Text Searching of XML Text and Documents. W3C has published an initial Public Working Draft for XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Full-Text. Created as a joint specification by the W3C XML Query Working Group and the XSL Working Group as part of the XML Activity, this new draft specification defines a language that extends XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 with full-text search capabilities. As defined by the draft, "full-text queries are performed on text which has been tokenized, i.e., broken into a
Abstract:
This document specifies goals, usage scenarios, and requirements for the W3C XML Query data model, algebra, and query language.
Status of this document:
This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. The latest status of this document series is maintained at the W3C.
This is a W3C Working Draft for review by W3C Members and other interested parties. It is a draft document and may be updated, replaced or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is
XML Signature (also called XMLDsig, XML-DSig, XML-Sig) is a W3C recommendation that defines an XML syntax for digital signatures. Functionally, it has much in common with PKCS#7 but is more extensible and geared towards signing XML documents. It is used by various Web technologies such as SOAP, SAML, and others.
XML signatures can be used to sign data–a resource–of any type, typically XML documents, but anything that is accessible via a URL can be signed. An XML signature used to sign a resource outside its containing XML document is called a