[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] XML matters for the Web - and the browser
I spent the last part of this week at the WEB2001 conference in San Francisco, finally returning to the Web development world from which I came to XML. My presentation - "XML's Impact on Web Development" - started off with pretty much an apology. While XML was originally designed as "SGML for the Web", it seemed to have landed pretty much everywhere in computing except the Web. The XML community has not spent much time reaching out to Web developers, and some members (including vendors) in the XML community seem intent on rebuilding the Web in a far more complicated style. The tools used for HTML Web development, many of which are easily applied to XML, are widely disparaged rather than encouraged as gateways to new possibilities. CGI/ASP/JSP/ColdFusion/PHP/etc. can be used to generate XML documents, and Web developers familiar with such tools can shift their skills to the lately more lucrative universe of XML communications. Parsing XML isn't rocket science, and can be done in those contexts with little more difficulty than connecting to a relational database, something that happens every day. Instead of reusing these tools and skills, however, buzzword-compliant vendors seem intent on creating systems which sell at far higher prices and rarely provide that substantial an abstraction. Maybe programmers shun the notion of hiring Web developers to perform this kind of work for cultural reasons, but the people with the skills are out there. On the client side, it's not very difficult to present XML documents in a Web browser. Really! Cascading Style Sheets, an existing technology well-known by a substantial number of professional Web developers (and substantial numbers of amateurs), is perfectly capable of describing complex browser-based presentation of XML documents. There are some gaps - CSS doesn't yet allow developers to specify 'element X is an image', linking is in its infancy, and forms remain a problem - but there are workarounds for all of these. Instead of reusing CSS and enhancing it to support the few remaining gaps, however, a lot of people insist that HTML is the one true way, the lingua franca. Some argue that developing Web pages in XML is a waste of time, others argue that creating content in XML is great but that XSLT transformation are a required bridge in the publication process, somehow fundamental to the workflow. Some browser vendors - notably Mozilla and Netscape - have realized that XML+CSS is powerful stuff. Other browser vendors seem content to perform strange internal transformations between the XML+CSS and the HTML they've known so well for a long while, leaving XML developers faced with either a severely diminished presentation palette or the learning curve of XSLT. What are we losing here? Those who push HTML for presentation and XML for data storage give the rest of us much less flexibility in our own development processes. Steeper learning curves are one cost, but the continued push to send HTML, even slightly cleaned-up XHTML, to the client leaves us in a straitjacket. HTML does a barely adequate job of representing information. There are plenty of kludges, workarounds, and wild solutions built on top of HTML, since it's "what we've got", but HTML seems quainter and quainter as time passes. ("Barely adequate" was a compliment when HTML first appeared, but don't mean it that way today.) Working with HTML means abandoning the notion of sending rich content to clients who can process it independently of the server-side processing that dominates most Web applications. There are those who don't care to send rich information, but there are also those who are tired of spending huge sums on servers while browser clients spend their time idle. XHTML offers some prospect of improvement, but the specifications seem so obsessed with validation that the work/benefit ratio of rich XHTML documents is tilted heavily toward the work. Working with HTML also limits communication within organizations. A lot of sites have found that WYSIWYG tools simply can't meet their needs. As a result, there are a lot of HTML templates out there which contain comments like "news story goes here" or "enter date here". If editors could work in XML, the labels might make sense, and the presentation dross (from a writer's perspective) could be separated out into CSS. I have a very difficult time believing that people want to edit documents in an editor which shows XML in one window and an XSLT transformation in another window. CSS offers much less overhead for such tasks. Content management systems have their place, but I'd like to think both that they aren't necessary for the relatively simple scenarios I presented above, and that CMS can be enriched and simplified substantially by taking advantage of tools we already understand. I have a hard time believing that "SGML for the Web" is fit only for servers, or that the "Web" in question is really the business-to-business communications of "Web services". At WEB2001, it seemed like a lot of Web developers were taking notice of the options XML had to offer them, while still bewailing the notion that it takes a 1200-page book and a notion of transformative style sheets to make use of it. Perhaps this would change if the Microsoft Office folks would notice that XML+CSS is probably a much easier way to integrate their information with a Web browser than is transformation to HTML. Perhaps a shift in perspective, revaluing many of the reasons cited for doing XML in the first place, might lead us to ask how best to make use of the tools and experience we currently have available. I've been in this wilderness for four years now, and I'm finally hearing (loudly, at that!) from Web developers that they're interested in using the tools we've worked so hard to develop. I'd like to make sure that we make it easier for people with years of experience on the Web to apply XML. Sadly, much of the XML community and some of the HTML community insists that XML is some special discipline that requires technologies having little to do with the process of making rich information available on the Web to both humans and computers. Simon St.Laurent Associate Editor O'Reilly & Associates, Inc.
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