An imperative application of XML is the exchange of electronic information among numerous data resources on the net. XML data always propagate on the net and applications need to add and cumulative data from different resource. It also clean and alter the data to aid exchange. This presentation is about querying language for XML known as XML-QL. This argument is suitable for performing the above jobs. As XML-QL is declarative and relational comprehensive query language of coding and is quite easy that it can be optimized and time. This
A group named Web consortium XML linking is creating stipulations to facilitate more superior hypertext functionality on web. This description is about the goals and approaches of XML linking. It also describe the HTML linking limitations seeks to overcome the XML linking. Once the linking is done it does the survey of working groups main specifications.
A short description about background of xml linking is mentioned below:
You might know HTML tag set and element type such as A are most in use and famous as well. However, still there are
An important application of XML is the interchange of electronic data (EDI) between multiple data sources on the Web. As XML data proliferates on the Web, applications will need to integrate and aggregate data from multiple source and clean and transform data to facilitate exchange. Data extraction, conversion, transformation, and integration are all well-understood database problems, and their solutions rely on a query language. We present a query language for XML, called XML-QL, which we argue is suitable for performing the above tasks. XML-QL is a
The question "who cares?" is usually a rhetorical question -- not a query for information, but a statement in question form that expresses something declarative. This rhetorical question usually means "I don't care and doubt if anyone does." When I say "XLink: who cares?", however, I don't mean it rhetorically. I really want to know: who out there still cares about XLink?
I did care, ever since I first heard about the work on "XML Part 2: Linking," as it was called at the announcement of XML's existence at SGML '96. (XSL, before XSLT was split away
XML shares common origins with HTML and SGML. SGML or "Standard Generalized Markup Language" was issued as an international standard (ISO 8879) in 1986. It was intended for semantic markup that would assist computer cataloging and indexing. SGML provided flexibility that had not been available before and became very popular and was applied in many ways beyond the intentions of the original developers. It was, however, very complex and expensive.
Brief history
About 1990, Tim Berners-Lee at CERN developed a new, simpler language that could be used in