'''XML''', or e'''X'''tensible '''M'''arkup '''L'''anguage, is a [data format]. ** See Also ** [Natively accessing XML]: [Interfacing with XML]: a developers discussion about merging the various XML packages [Pull down menus in XML]: [Simple XML report writer]: parse a report in XML, display it in a [Tk] [canvas], and produce [postscript] from it [Regular Expressions Are Not A Good Idea for Parsing XML, HTML, or e-mail Addresses]: [XML pretty-printing]: tDOM builds-in a pretty-printing serialization option. Those with an interest in a comparable function for TclDOM are welcome to try/use/improve [http://phaseit.net/claird/comp.lang.tcl/dom_pretty_print.html%|%dom_pretty_print]. [XML Tree Walking]: [XML tutorials]: [XML-list]: a survey of [list]-based representations of XML documetns [XML/tDOM encoding issues with the http package]: [XML_Wrapper]: create [Tk] forms on the fly from an XML file [XSD schema validate an XML document]: ** Resources ** [http://www.xml.org/%|%xml.org]: ** Reading ** [http://web.archive.org/web/20110606145728/http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/webservices/library/ws-xtcl/index.html%|%Programming XML and Web services in TCL, Part 1 : An initial primer], [Cameron Laird], 2001-04-01: surveys the state-of-the-art as of spring 2001, mainly from a [Zveno]-biased perspective. One deficiency of that article is its neglect of [Jochen Loewer]'s [tDOM] work. [http://web.archive.org/web/20110727035158/http://ldn.linuxfoundation.org/column/untaught-xml-schema%|%Untaught XML Schema], [Cameron Laird], 2009-06-05: [http://web.archive.org/web/20110616090536/http://www.zdnet.com/news/microsoft-patents-xml-word-processing-documents/329645%|%Microsoft patents XML word processing documents], Rupert Goodwins, 2009-08-07: Amusingly enough, Microsoft has also in August 2009 been ordered to stop selling their Word product '''because''' of its XML functionality: [http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9136539/Injunction_on_Microsoft_Word_unlikely_to_halt_sales?source=CTWNLE_nlt_dailyam_2009-08-12%|%Injunction on Microsoft Word unlikely to halt sales], Nancy Gohring, 2009-08-11. ** Examples ** [Simple XML report writer]: [XML Graph to canvas]: ** Description ** XML is a simplified form of [SGML], but stricter (more regular) in some aspects: * Singleton elements must end with `/>` * attribute values must be quoted Example: ======none ====== Tcl's excellent [Unicode] abilities make it a good language for processing XML. There is broad confusion about whether to represent attributes of things that are the subject of an XML document as attributes of a tag or as the content of individual entities within an XML entity, and misuse abounds. The intent of the specification is clear, even if it is not explicit: An attribute in an XML tag describes the entity that is part of the structure of the document, not the thing in the subject of the document the entity refers to. In other words, data pertaining to the subject of the document comprise the content of tags, and data that describe the document itself comprise the attributes of tags. A more concise way to put it is that entities are structure, and content is content. The confusion may arise partially because the subject of some part of the document may be the document itself, in which case data about the structure and interpretation of the document may occur as content. In this case, data that could occur as attributes in a tag in one part of the document occurs instead as content in another part of the document. This is legitimate. The inverse case, where content occurs as attributes of a tag, is not. ** [Parsing] ** [tDOM] and [TclXML]/[TclDOM] are the two main Tcl extensions for parsing XML, providing both [SAX] parsing for stream-oriented parsing, and [DOM] for document-oriented parsing. See Also: [A little XML parser]: [Parsing XML]: [snitDom]: [tclhttpd XML server]: a simple wrapper around Sleepycat's dbxml library version 2 to implement a remote XML database server [TAX: A Tiny API for XML]: inspired by [Stephen Uhler's HTML parser in 10 lines] [tkxmllint]: a [GUI] frontent to xmllint [XML shallow parsing with regular expressions]: [xmlp]: [YAXMLP an XML parser]: re-entrant, and designed to not use [regexp] or [string map] `ycl parse xml`: A stackless parser based on [coroutine%|%coroutines]. Features a forgiving mode, and also hooks that make it possible to parse streaming data. The resulting parse tree is available as a hierarchy of namespaces along with a set of commands that provide an interface to the hierarchy. ** Validation ** One way of specifying the valid tag structure of a class of documents is to use a Document Type Definition, [DTD] for short. This way was inherited from [SGML]. There are alternative ways ... XMLSchema, Relax(NG), ... See Also: [A little XML Schema validator]: ** Generating XML ** [Formatting ls information in XML]: an example of a manual approach to generating XML [Minimalist XML Generation]: [Howto export Microsoft Outlook contacts to XML using tcom and tDom]: [Migrating MS Access to other databases using XML]: [xmlgen / htmlgen]: Generates [HTML]/XML from a Tcl script representing the desired document. ---- In a mailing list conversation [[reference?], [Steve Ball] succinctly advised, "When creating XML, I generally use [TclDOM]. Create a [DOM] tree in memory, and then use 'dom::DOMImplementation serialize $doc' to generate the XML. The TclDOM package will make sure that the generated XML is well-formed. Alternatively, XML is just text so there's no reason why you can't just create the string directly. Eg: ====== puts $content ====== The problem with this is that (a) you have to worry about the XML syntax nitty-gritty and (b) the content variable may contain special characters which you have to deal with. There are also some generation packages available, like the '[html]' package in [tcllib] (this will be added to TclXML RSN, when my workload permits)." [DKF]: If you're going for the cheap-hack method of XML generation mentioned above, you'll want this: ====== proc asXML {content {tag document}} { set XML_MAP { < < > > & & \" " ' ' } return <$tag>[string map $XML_MAP $content] } ====== Naturally, the ''XML_MAP'' variable is factorisable... [MHo]: Why not using '''html::quoteFormValue''' for this purpose? For generation of XML (HTML) the pure Tcl way, have a look at the [xmlgen / htmlgen%|%xmlgen] module of [TclXML] [DKF]: That's when you're moving away from cheap hacks. And HTML has a lot more entities than XML, though most are optional. If you want to get particular about entity encoding '''arbitrary text''', this is working for me: ====== variable entityMap [list & &\; < <\; > >\; \" "\;\ \u0000 ====== ** Browsing / Editing ** [a little XML browser]: [XML DOM Tk Text Browser Editor]: [FanXE]: ** Publishing ** [Anastasia]: Designed for the publication of large, highly-complex XML documents and document xcollections. [http://www.fh-wedel.de/~si/xml2html.2/xml2html/xml/index.xml%|%xml2html]: Tcl-based tool for authoring web sites in XML then rendering to HTML. ** Related Technologies ** There are a whole host of technologies related to XML: [XPath]: for selecting nodes from a document [XML Query%|%XQuery]: [XSL]/[XSLT]: for transforming documents [DTD] and XMLSchema: for specifying document schemas [tDOM] and [TclXML] both provide good support for at least XPath and XSLT. ** XML Formats ** XML by itself is just a partially-standardized syntax for data. It's used as the basis for a variety of different applications, such as: [CML]: Chemical Markup Language [excel xml] for [Excel]: (X)[HTML] for web pages: [RDF] and [OWL] for general relational/logical data models: [DocBook] for technical documentation: along with other office document formats (e.g. Microsoft's office XML format, [excel xml], OpenDoc, etc) [MathML]: [OpenMath]: [SOAP] and [XML-RPC]: for remote procedure calls/web-services. [VML]: Vector Markup Language, for vector graphics [XLink]: a common notation for links in XML to other resources Various configuration file formats (especially in the [Java] world): ** Alternatives ** Alternatives to using XML for data files include: [Tcl] itself: [TDL]: [JSON]: <> Data Serialization Format | XML