[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Re: Happy Birthday, XML!
The wheel turns. So we have had 10 years each with SGML winning at the top with long-term industrial and legal documentation from the late 1980s, XML expanding from the middle out from the late 1990s, and JSON winning from the low-end up from the late 2000s. Is it time for the next thing? What each of them suggest is that the next thing will probably already be here, that the new big thing is not brand new, but some twist that takes advantage of existing technology in some major way that value-adds new usefulness (for SGML, it was to regularize existing ad hoc "markdown" style syntaxes and reduce the dependency on inustry-specific custom applications for all parts of the document chain; for XML, to take over from existing SGML systems and documents; for JSON, to fit with _javascript_ et al). Looking at Tim Bray's thoughts on XML at 20 on XML.COM, I think he short-changes XML's influence in one regard: there is one major effect that I think XML )and SGML) has had that is underappreciated: it cemented the expectation that text should be annotatable with information to allow values-adds. This flooded into Java and C# annotations, which turned upside down how frameworks and development proceeds: when I see Java annotations I see the spawn of XML's attributes and processing instructions. Regards Rick On Sun, Feb 11, 2018 at 10:54 AM, Henry Luo <henry@perpetuatech.net> wrote:
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