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Re: [xml-dev] Formatless files
- From: Michael Kay <mike@saxonica.com>
- To: Roger L Costello <costello@mitre.org>
- Date: Wed, 10 Aug 2022 08:53:28 +0100
>
>
> A file has no inherent format.
Not true. Every file has an inherent format.
>
> The format of a file is determined by the programs that use it.
The operating systems that have become popular, Windows and Unix, both of which are 40+ years old, have file systems that treat the content of a file as a sequence of bytes. There are (or were) other operating systems that had much more detailed knowledge of file formats. It's an example of a common phenomenon in the history of computing: simplicity and low cost wins over technical sophistication. Something which is now causing the industry huge costs because the popular operating systems are so insecure.
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> How do those excerpts apply to XML? Why are there so many file formats - the XML file format, the JSON file format, the CSV file format, and so on? Isn't that contrary to the idea of formatless files?
>
There's no such thing as a formatless file. You're talking about files that have a format, but whose format is unknown at a certain level of the system.
Michael Kay
Saxonica
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