[Date Prev]
| [Thread Prev]
| [Thread Next]
| [Date Next]
--
[Date Index]
| [Thread Index]
RE: [xml-dev] An inquiry into the nature of XML and how it orientsour perception of information
- From: "Len Bullard" <cbullard@hiwaay.net>
- To: "'Liam Quin'" <liam@w3.org>, "'Tim Bray'" <Tim.Bray@Sun.COM>
- Date: Sat, 21 Nov 2009 22:45:52 -0600
Also agree. We tried it with markup a couple of times. It's data. Full
stop.
len
From: Liam Quin [mailto:liam@w3.org]
On Sat, Nov 21, 2009 at 11:49:03AM -0800, Tim Bray wrote:
> It seems to me at a pretty deep level that O-O is
> about hiding and encapsulation; an object is a thing that can do some
things
> on demand, don't bother your pretty little head about how it's done.
>
> It seems to me like XML is oriented exactly 180? in the opposite
direction:
> Here's the data, here are some labels for the data, here are some ordering
> and containment relationships, you're free to do whatever you want with
it.
+1
> That's a good thing and (I've always the big win) - the provider doesn't
> constrain what the receiver does. -Tim
Yup, agreed 100% - it's why you can't speak of an XML document as
a function, but, rather, an XML processor is a function that takes
one or more XML documents as inputs...
The semantics in XML are extrinsic, not intrinsic.
Liam
[Date Prev]
| [Thread Prev]
| [Thread Next]
| [Date Next]
--
[Date Index]
| [Thread Index]