[Date Prev]
| [Thread Prev]
| [Thread Next]
| [Date Next]
--
[Date Index]
| [Thread Index]
Re: [xml-dev] RE: When you create a markup language,what do your parent elements mean? What do your children elements mean?
- From: Frank Manola <fmanola@acm.org>
- To: "Costello, Roger L." <costello@mitre.org>
- Date: Mon, 26 Sep 2011 22:17:57 -0400
Roger--
You need to distinguish between RDF and RDF/XML. RDF is not a markup language, and has no notions of parent and child elements (or any other kind of elements, for that matter).
--Frank
On Sep 26, 2011, at 6:49 PM, Costello, Roger L. wrote:
> Hi Folks,
>
> These two markup languages have a consistent definition of what parent elements and child elements mean:
>
> 1. RDF
> 2. GML
>
> Both languages specify that parent elements represent a resource or object and child elements represent properties or attributes.
>
> Are those the only markup languages that have a consistent definition of what parent elements and child elements mean?
>
> If one is creating a markup language and wants to adopt a consistent definition for parent elements and child elements, is resource/object and property/attribute the only way to accomplish it?
>
> Is an Object-Oriented approach to markup the only viable approach when one wants to have a consistent definition for parent elements and child elements? That would be quite astonishing, given that people such as Tim Bray argue that "XML is 180 degrees apart from OO".
>
> /Roger
>
>
> _______________________________________________________________________
>
> XML-DEV is a publicly archived, unmoderated list hosted by OASIS
> to support XML implementation and development. To minimize
> spam in the archives, you must subscribe before posting.
>
> [Un]Subscribe/change address: http://www.oasis-open.org/mlmanage/
> Or unsubscribe: xml-dev-unsubscribe@lists.xml.org
> subscribe: xml-dev-subscribe@lists.xml.org
> List archive: http://lists.xml.org/archives/xml-dev/
> List Guidelines: http://www.oasis-open.org/maillists/guidelines.php
>
[Date Prev]
| [Thread Prev]
| [Thread Next]
| [Date Next]
--
[Date Index]
| [Thread Index]