XML, the eXtensible Markup Language, is just another file format.
In a way, there's nothing special about it except that it's
standard and it resembles HTML. In an alternate universe, the
standard file format could be LISP-based and that universe would have
the same advantages as using XML.
Because XML is a standard, it provides several advantages over a
proprietary format
- Avoid programer meetings to decide on a file format.
- Simplify documentation by using a well-known syntax.
- Use available parsers instead of writing new ones (SAX and JAXP).
- Use standard datastructures instead of inventing new ones (the DOM).
- Leverage tools built on the standards (XPath and XSL).
Of course, XML does not solve everything. You still need to
create your own tags and attributes for your application.
There are two standard XML parsing methods: parsing to a the standard
DOM (XML Document Object Model) and parsing to user callbacks (SAX).
In general, parsing to the DOM is often easier to use but parsing with
SAX is more efficient and uses less memory. The choice really depends
on the application.
Sun's JAXP (Java XML Parsing) API provides an
implementation-independent way of parsing XML.
The W3C Document Object Model (DOM) is the standard datastructure for
representing an XML file in memory. The structure is based on nodes,
where elements (tags), attributes, comments, and text are all
represented as different kinds of nodes.
Resin provides a convenient API for print XML. In addition to
printing standard XML, it can handle pretty-printing and printing
HTML files. For example, several HTML tags, like <img> print as
non-standard XML.
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