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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Re: Begging the Question (the novel)
> Uche Ogbuji wrote: > > I've read XML Schemas only once. I hope not to have to repeat the > > experience any time soon. But I don't see that it is relevant. I don't > > use XML Schemas, but I do use namespaces. > > lisa says: > > It's relevant because the XML Schema structures specification provides > the syntactical "glue" to connect to a schema to a document for > validation (what would probably be getting done if the URI was > dereferenced, as is perfectly legal, blah, blah blah). In the general case, or only when XSchema is used? IOW, does the spec claim to establish this connection for RELAX, Schematron, etc.? > If there were a single standardized way of referencing a schema from an > XML document, and dereferencing a schema from a namespace URI violated > it in some way, it would be a good reason to not do it. But since it > (the namespace URI value) is actually one of the "normal" ways to > associate an XML document with its schema, it seems to suggest that this > is a good idea, and that it "works" and might be useful for other > applications too. Hmm. If this were "normal" in the strict sense, I'd have expected Rick Jelliffe, who is on the Schemas WG, to have given it stronger endorsement. > Or certainly, it wouldn't hurt anything :-) We have indeed wandered into unfamiliar territory for me, but my guess is that if the REC says so, and a document is given with an XSD doctype, let it be as the Schemas REC says, including whatever namespace resolving machinery they desire. But at that point we're at that hypothetical layer above core namespaces that I thought no one wanted to venture into until the discussion of namespaces themselves had been hashed out. RDF operates at that layer and so does SOAP, and apparently XSchemas. The problem is that for XML technologies in general, it's Wild Wild West. > And if you already knew everything I brought up in that last e-mail > about XML Namespaces, then do you agree with me that these dereferencing > issues are non-issues, because it doesn't look like we would be breaking > anything in the process. No, I don't. > Because I'm thoroughly confused about how anyone who thoroughly > understood XML Namespaces could argue about this whole "Tool X" taking > over the world with the evil defacto schema implementation bull. Let me take you from hyperbole to the real world chamber of horrors. MS-XSL Intel AT RAM extensions MS Kerberos extensions (not to mention PPP and DHCP) Wonderwall HTML 3.x MS Java SQL + Objects favicon.ico (whimsical but not unconsidered entry) If you think no one will try to embrace/extend/coopt XML, I'd suggest you review the history of the computer industry. My point is that a sizable opening for this lies at the core. Is this Megiddo? Come off it. I'm partaking in discussion, not raising the home guard. -- Uche Ogbuji Principal Consultant uche.ogbuji@f... +1 303 583 9900 x 101 Fourthought, Inc. http://Fourthought.com 4735 East Walnut St, Ste. C, Boulder, CO 80301-2537, USA Software-engineering, knowledge-management, XML, CORBA, Linux, Python
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