[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Re: MicroXML
On 13 December 2010 09:42, James Clark <jjc@jclark.com> wrote: > On Mon, Dec 13, 2010 at 4:33 PM, Andrew Welch <andrew.j.welch@gmail.com> > wrote: >> >> On 13 December 2010 09:01, James Clark <jjc@jclark.com> wrote: >> > I wrote a post describing a fairly minimal subset of XML: >> > http://blog.jclark.com/2010/12/microxml.html >> >> Looks great - apart from the xmlns requirement if prefixes are used... >> doesn't that make it no longer a subset? > > It's designed to be a subset of XML 1.0 but not of XML 1.0 + XML Namespaces. ...I think everyone takes "XML" to mean "XML 1.0 + XML Namespaces" so to say something is a "subset of XML" but not mean namespaces you might get done for false advertising :) > However, it does allow you to make your documents be namespace well-formed > if you want. This is a tough problem: full XML Namespaces seems like too > much complexity, so I've tried to find a compromise. If you didn't have to compromise, what would you do? I would say in situations where namespace-like features are needed, use XML 1.0. >> b) use an underscore or dot, eg <mycomp.foo> >> > > You could just disallow colons in element and attribute names, but then you > lose the ability to work with XML vocabularies that require the use of the > non-default namespace (eg xlink:*, xml:*). Is that an issue...? If so, use xml 1.0. The kind of use-case for MicroXML that I see is where someone is given the task of creating some XML for the first time and they need some guidance on what to do... a quick google reveals "MicroXML" to be the best easiest format for simple XML, and they follow the rules "no namespaces", "no DTDs", "no CDATA sections" etc and create some good clean XML that's then easy to work with. At the moment, the inclination seems to be to use a default namespace just because that seems like the right thing to do, they leave off the prolog but save the file in Windows-1252, wrap all text in CDATA sections and/or run the XML through some custom escaping code... an ultra-simple alternative would solve all of that. -- Andrew Welch http://andrewjwelch.com
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