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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] RE: simple question on namespaces. Last one.
The XML Namespaces specification says certain things and not others. It is an improper use of the specification to cite it to mean things that it does not say or that are in contradiction to what it does say. This holds equally true whether one approves or disapproves of what it says. 1. a. The URI of a namespace is not a mere string. Per the namespaces in XML specification, it is a URI. b. I do not know what you mean by "No hidden benefits for any XML processing tool." 2. a. Retrieval of a document or other resource based on the URI of the namespace is not "abuse" of the specification. The specification states "It is not a goal that it be directly usable for retrieval of a schema (if any exists)." Had it been the intention of the specification's authors to prohibit retrieval of a resource, the wording would have said that, instead. As it is, the specification is simply neutral on the matter of whether retrieval is possible or not, desirable or not. b. I do not know what documents you refer to by the definite article in "the documents". 3. I do not understand what you are saying in this point. 4. I do not understand what you are saying in this point. I do not understand the somewhat conspiracy-theory like discussions of "tool X." One last point: During the namespaces specification design and also during the design of schemas, it was lengthily debated whether a namespace and a schema are coextensive, that is, whether there is only one schema associated with a namespace and visa versa. In both cases, the conclusion after much consideration was that namespaces and schemas are distinct. Elements etc. within a namespace may be associated, at the processing applications convenience, with any schema. Further, there may be named items in a namespace that are not associated with any schema. (This is a separate matter from whether the owner of a namespace may wish to publish a definitive schema and state its association.) -----Original Message----- From: Paul Tchistopolskii [mailto:paul@q...] Sent: Wednesday, December 27, 2000 9:35 PM To: xml-dev@l... Subject: Re: simple question on namespaces. Last one. ----- Original Message ----- From: Paul Tchistopolskii <paul@q...> > When something is *not* a URL it should *not* look like a URL. My 'invention' > just cleans up the mess, I think. And I still think I'm right because I see not > too much rationale in your arguments. I'm wrong. Somehow. After reading the letter From: Andrew Layman <andrewl@m...> I'm making a bit different statement. 1. Current semantics of namespace declaration is to attach some hidden string to every element/attribute in the document. The value of the string does not matter, the only restriction is to be unique. No hidden benefits for any XML processing tool. 2. Some company makes some tool ( tool X ) which starts abusing the namespace declaration, using URLs to retrieve the documents. It *is* abusing the namespace declaration ( because the semantics of the namespace declaration is (1)) , but who cares, right ? 3. I'm XML developer. I have to design some schema and I also want my documents to be processed by tool X. Of course - I'll use URLs for my namespaces , so that tool X can work with my 'namespaces'. Why should I take something *other* than URL ? URL is fine with W3C paper. URL is fine with 'tool X'. - very good. 4. That's it. Now it does not matter to me what is actually written in some paper on W3C website. Also because that paper explicitly says that "URLs could be used" - there is no contradiction. Just another 'de facto' standard of tool X which says "namespaces are URLs and please : make this and that information accessible by URL". That's it. I'm doomed. See - how easy. I should now configure my webserver in some way that will be good *only* for 'tool X' . We should just wait for first tool X to appear. I also think I know what will be the first company producing tool X. I was wrong. Those namespaces things should be URLs, because they will *be* URLs anyway. What is your problem with URLs PaulT ? My problem is that the scenario described above works only for *one* company producing 'tool X'. If there are 2 companies, and 2 tools X and I want to process my documents with both of the tools, I can not do that. One tool may expect one thing at the end of URL, another tool may expect another thing at the end of the *same* URL , and I have URLs hardcoded in every document I have, because they are not my URLs! They are my *namespaces*. Just 'tuned' a but for the sake of 'tool X'. If some tool starts abusing namespaces declaration ( using URL for retrieval ) I'm locked to that tool. The only way to avoid this situation is to have the current semantics of the namespace declaration ( see (1) - above ) and to make it hard to abuse it. That's why I tried to remove the http: from the URL. It makes a bit harder to abuse namespaces declaration and it has all the current benefits of uniqueness. Nevermind. I'm waiting for tool X to appear. Rgds.Paul.
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