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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] FW: "namespace" fixed on whatis.com!
Thanks to my carefully diplomatic remarks (see below), the Web will henceforth be a less confusing place: http://whatis.techtarget.com/definition/0,,sid9_gci213711,00.html -----Original Message----- From: Contactus@w... [mailto:contactus@w...] Sent: Saturday, August 18, 2001 8:10 AM To: 'Evan Lenz ' Cc: Rouse, Margaret Subject: "namespace" fixed on whatis.com! Evan... Thanks for insisting we rewrite "namespace" and please accept our apologies for taking so long! I append the new version that will be active on the site tomorrow or later today. Please let me know if it needs change. I've kept it short; I'd rather let Ronald Bourret's FAQ do most of the work. Thanks for contributing! Lowell Thing, Editor, whatis.com Visit TechTarget, the leading network of industry-specific Web sites for enterprise IT professionals at www.techtarget.com. ---------- namespace In general, a namespace uniquely identifies a set of names so that there is no ambiguity when objects having different origins but the same names are mixed together. Using the Extensible Markup Language (XML), an XML namespace is a collection of element type and attribute names. These element types and attribute names are uniquely identified by the name of the unique XML namespace of which they are a part. In an XML document, any element type or attribute name can thus have a two-part name consisting of the name of its namespace and then its local (functional) name. For example, suppose the same XML document included the element type of OWNER for owners of motorcycles as well as for owners of automobiles. It might be necessary or desirable to know that an owner name was one of those who owned a motorcyle rather than an automobile. Having different motorcycle and automobile namespaces would make this possible. Effectively, it would make it possible to label motorcycle owners differently than automobile owners without having to create a different element type for each. In XML, a namespace is commonly given the name of a Uniform Resource Locator (URL) both because the namespace may be associated with the site or page of that URL (for example, a company name) and because a URL is conveniently likely to be a unique name. Note that the URL is not necessarily intended to be used other than as a name nor is there any namespace document or XML schema that must be accessed; the URL is simply used as a name (and part of the two-part name of any element type or attribute name so that the names are unique within the document). Read more about it at: > Ronald Bourret provides an extensive "XML Namespaces FAQ." > SearchMiddleware.com provides links fo more information about "XML-Based Integration and Data Exchange." -----Original Message----- From: Evan Lenz To: contactus@W... Sent: 8/15/01 6:37 PM Subject: WhatIs.com: Contact Us Feedback <http://WhatIs.techtarget.com/images/header-logo-small.gif> Contact Us Feedback August 15, 2001 User Information Sent to: contactus@W... From: Evan Lenz Return Email: elenz@x... <mailto:elenz@x...> Address: Town/City: State: AK Postal/Zip code: Country: select In addition, Evan Lenz would NOT like to be listed as a WhatIs contributor. Feedback/Suggestion http://whatis.techtarget.com/definition/0,,sid9_gci213711,00.html Whoever wrote this has no idea what they're talking about. This ridiculous piece of nonsense should be removed from the site. Visit TechTarget.com, the leading network of industry-specific Web sites for enterprise IT professionals at http://www.techtarget.com.
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