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Re: How long before services sending/receiving XML mightneed r
- From: Dimitre Novatchev <dnovatchev@gmail.com>
- To: "Simon St.Laurent" <simonstl@simonstl.com>
- Date: Thu, 11 Nov 2021 12:45:34 -0800

Sort of? I don't see "serialization format" locked into the
question:
"If, say, governments currently require data or documents to be
sent to them in XML format, what professional advice"
API development isn't necessarily about object serialization. In
particular, a lot of REST and HATEOAS is more open than that. A
lot of explicitly document XML documents are assembled by
computers, meant to be sent over the wire, and even provoke
meaningful responses from machines.
Thanks,
Simon
Seems like we are understanding the question differently.
To me "software systems communicating with each other (one-way or two-way) using XML" is about the encoding technique/protocol used to pass data from one system to another, and this may have nothing to do with the meaning of that data or how the receiver will treat it after it arrives and has been decoded.
And if the data that is being communicated doesn't have an inherently hierarchical structure/meaning/grouping, then it is quite possible that something else, other than XML would be the best choice of expressing that data even to a human reader. As for "perpetuity", we have some good examples of dead languages that are still in use today:
Latin, Sanskrit, Biblical Hebrew, Middle English, Old Slavonic, Pali, and Armaic, ...
Just days ago at the .NET 2021 Conference, when a presenter was asked if it was still possible to serialize as XML, as an alternative to JSON-based serialization, his reaction was: "Do we really want to go back in time to the start of this century?" and then reluctantly showing that "even this" is possible.
These are the facts.
Based on these facts there could be several possible scenarios for the future, and here is one that is not too rosy: Facts like these indicate that it would be more difficult for the average data professional in the future to create and process data in XML format, due to deteriorating or lacking tools. This could impact the status of XML as a widely used standard for use in expressing data. Maybe less and less people will know what XML is. What is the average age of the members of this mailing list, or of xsl-list, or Balisage or any other XML-oriented conference? How has this average age changed in the last 20 years?
I am not saying that the above scenario is firmly bound to happen, just that we shouldn't be surprised.
More importantly, what can we do in order to prevent any such worst-case scenario from happening?
Just my 2c. thoughts contribution...
On 11/11/2021 2:14 PM, Dimitre
Novatchev wrote:
>
I can't say that XML's use WILL be perpetual, but I definitely
think that it's reasonable that it COULD be perpetual.
The original question is not about whether XML will stop to
be used in general, but whether or not its use as a
serialization format will disappear.
I believe that the main goals and use-cases for XML were
not at all being a serialization format, even though it also
achieved this. To be fair, very few human beings (if any at
all) are sniffing the wires under a microscope, thus it isn't
at all an issue whether or not any human-readable
serialization format would/should be used for serialization --
we don't care.
If something like God exists (no offense intended for
stronger believers), they would probably be watching network
messages and understanding their contents, regardless of the
actual serialization format being used. Maybe they have long
ago established their own standard (reminds me somehow of
"Invisible XML" :) )?
Thanks,
Dimitre
Hmm... so I've started fiddling with MIDI again. That's
a mere 38 years old and still going strong. It now runs
over USB and a few other options as well as the
traditional dedicated DIN cables. There is MIDI 2.0 work
of course, but:
"MIDI 2.0 is an extension of MIDI 1.0. It does not
replace MIDI 1.0 but builds on the core principles,
architecture, and semantics of MIDI 1.0.
A foundational architecture for MIDI 2.0 expansion is
defined by the MIDI Capability Inquiry (MIDI-CI)
specification. MIDI-CI allows Devices with bidirectional
communication to agree to use extended MIDI capabilities
beyond those already defined in MIDI 1.0, while
carefully protecting backward compatibility.
MIDI 2.0 is not a stand-alone specification.
Manufacturers and developers must have a thorough
understanding of MIDI 1.0 in order to implement MIDI
2.0." - https://www.midi.org/specifications/midi-2-0-specifications
There was, of course, a burst of projects deprecating and
often removing XML from their systems over the last decade
or so, as JSON (and sometimes YAML and sometimes other
formats) took over data work that XML had been doing.
XHTML still exists quietly, but again, a lot of that
vanished in roughly the same time period.
I don't get any sense in the document-centric worlds that
I follow that people still working with XML are calling
for revisions of the foundation specs or decommissioning.
I can't say that XML's use WILL be perpetual, but I
definitely think that it's reasonable that it COULD be
perpetual. As with MIDI, there are people who want to do
more (and less) and extend it in their own ways, but most
of that seems (so far) to be contained to specific
projects.
Thanks,
Simon
On 11/9/2021 11:30 AM, Stephen D Green wrote:
Hi XML Dev’ers,
Do you have any opinion on how long
software systems communicating with each other (one-way
or two-way) using XML might be able to continue to use
XML this way? If, say, governments currently require
data or documents to be sent to them in XML format, what
professional advice would you suggest about how long
would be reasonable before this use of XML should be
replaced? Or do you think such uses of XML could
reasonably be perpetual?
Many thanks for your consideration.
Stephen Green
--
--
Cheers,
Dimitre Novatchev
---------------------------------------
Truly great madness cannot be achieved without significant
intelligence.
---------------------------------------
To invent, you need a good imagination and a pile of junk
-------------------------------------
Never fight an inanimate object
-------------------------------------
To avoid situations in which you might make mistakes may be
the
biggest mistake of all
------------------------------------
Quality means doing it right when no one is looking.
-------------------------------------
You've achieved success in your field when you don't know
whether what you're doing is work or play
-------------------------------------
To achieve the impossible dream, try going to sleep.
-------------------------------------
Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.
-------------------------------------
Typing monkeys will write all Shakespeare's works in
200yrs.Will they write all patents, too? :)
-------------------------------------
Sanity is madness put to good use.
-------------------------------------
I finally figured out the only reason to be alive is to
enjoy it.
-- Cheers, Dimitre Novatchev --------------------------------------- Truly great madness cannot be achieved without significant intelligence. --------------------------------------- To invent, you need a good imagination and a pile of junk ------------------------------------- Never fight an inanimate object ------------------------------------- To avoid situations in which you might make mistakes may be the biggest mistake of all ------------------------------------ Quality means doing it right when no one is looking. ------------------------------------- You've achieved success in your field when you don't know whether what you're doing is work or play ------------------------------------- To achieve the impossible dream, try going to sleep. ------------------------------------- Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored. ------------------------------------- Typing monkeys will write all Shakespeare's works in 200yrs.Will they write all patents, too? :) ------------------------------------- Sanity is madness put to good use. ------------------------------------- I finally figured out the only reason to be alive is to enjoy it.

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