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On Thu, 2005-04-07 at 14:03, Elliotte Rusty Harold wrote: > Not all of the benefits of XML derive from its basis in text. Some of > the benefits derive from its paranoia. Everything is checked every time. > If a process is generating bad data whether through malice, > incompetence, bugs, line noise, spec misinterpretation, disk corruption, > cosmic rays, or a dozen other reasons, we find out very quickly. > And what about "living" documents. If one document fragment is included inside another document, the overall validity of the document structure can't be inferred from the master document's compilation alone. If the included document fragment is /not/ binary xml then wouldn't it have to be reparsed and validated, in case it has been updated since the time of compilation of the master? If revalidating is unnecessary in binary xml, then the concept of referencing an external entity or xml file that is subject to changing on it's own, say like a master postal code file, or a master passwd file, is impossible from within a compiled binary xml document. -- Thanks, Charles Woerner Integration Engineer Ensenda, Inc.
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