Talk:Extensible Markup Language

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Revision as of 21:07, 6 June 2011 by imported>Pat Palmer (explanation of why I'm removing a link on External Links tab)
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 Definition A platform-independent, human-readable markup language used in a wide variety of applications for the storage and representation of textual data in a consistent, hierarchical, and well-formed structure. [d] [e]
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Forum Post

I saw your forum post about your article, and I think the reason why it's looking more like the spec is because the examples you've given are more or less the same, even though they might reference different things.

Allow me to provide a brief example. If I was writing an article about HTML, and I wanted to describe an element, I'd probably say something to the effect that

HTML elements are any property enclosed by a system of "opened" and "closed" tags; 

such as "<b>" and "</b>".  The element bold surrounds the included text, and 
turned on and off at the points for which you desire bold text.  The actual 
"b" and "/b" are the elements.

Instead of just saying

An element example:

<HTML><Head>Text</Head></HTML>

The above is an example of the HTML and Head elements.

and using the same code to show the examples. I hope this helps a little. --Robert W King 10:08, 1 June 2007 (CDT)

Robert, this is not a user page, so when you say "your" above, I have no idea to what individual your remark is addressed. It might be helpful to include a name, or maybe place this remark instead on that user's talk page. It would definitely help if you could provide an external link to the forum article. Otherwise, those of us who find this won't understand the issues. Thanks. Pat Palmer 18:22, 2 June 2007 (CDT)

Date of XML standard

This article states that the XML standard was developed in 1996; I think the actual date might ought to be 1998. This could is mainly a reminder to myself (or someone else interested) to look into that.Pat Palmer 16:59, 22 May 2011 (UTC)

removing the blog link in External Links tab

The blog there now is not particularly insightful, and in fact, seems to me to be prejudicial and opinionated and thus not very helpful. Just removing it, if no one objects (in which case, I'll restore it--but it's so quiet in here, I would be ecstatic if someone came along to argue with me).Pat Palmer 02:07, 7 June 2011 (UTC)