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- From: Jon.Bosak@eng.Sun.COM (Jon Bosak)
- To: xml-dev@ic.ac.uk
- Date: Fri, 15 May 1998 14:35:23 -0700
[Toby Speight:]
| But there are plenty of (non-parsing) applications that benefit from
| XML standard end-tags. An obvious one is selection of an element from
| a document; a regexp search for the start-tag, and then just match
| start and end tags *for that element type*, keeping track of depth
| *for that element type* (we don't even need to do that if the element
| type is known not to be nestable in itself). That application need
| not even notice tags for other element types.
This is precisely the scenario that I had in mind when I invented the
figure of the Desperate Perl Hacker -- someone who has no idea how to
build a parser but can do very powerful operations on large quantities
of XML using simple pattern matches if the presence of full end-tags
is guaranteed.
Jon
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