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  • From: Robin Cover <robin@o...>
  • To: "Costello, Roger L." <costello@m...>, "xml-dev@l..." <xml-dev@l...>
  • Date: Fri, 3 Feb 2012 13:09:14 -0600

Roger, the following resources might be of interest.  Both are
(way) out of date, but provide reasonable samples for the
specified coverage.

1. Naming and Design Rules
http://xml.coverpages.org/ndr.html

Naming and Design Rules (NDR) Specifications
- ACORD Naming and Design Rules (NDR)
- Danish XML Project: OIOXML Naming and Design Rules
- EPA Exchange Network XML Design Rules and Conventions
- Federal XML Naming and Design Rules Project
- Global Justice XML Data Model (GJXDM) Naming and Design Rules
- Hong Kong OGCIO Interoperability Framework for E-Government
- IRS XML Naming and Design Rules
- OAGIS Naming and Design Rules (NDR)
- OASIS LegalXML Exchange Document Methodology, Naming, and Design Rules (MNDR) Subcommittee
- Universal Business Language (UBL) Naming and Design Rules
- UN/CEFACT XML Naming and Design Rules Technical Specification
- US Department of the Navy XML Naming and Design Rules
- US National Information Exchange Model (NIEM) NDR

2. Use of Camel Case for Naming XML and XML-Related Components
http://xml.coverpages.org/camelCase.html

- Robin

On Fri, Feb 3, 2012 at 8:48 AM, Costello, Roger L. <costello@m...> wrote:
Hi Folks,

I am sampling some standard XML vocabularies to see what naming convention they use. Below is what I've compiled thus far. What naming convention do you use?

1. XML Schema: all elements and attributes are camel case. Examples: maxOccurs, elementFormDefault, substitutionGroup.

2. XSLT: all elements and attributes are lower-case, dash-separated. Examples: apply-templates, exclude-result-prefixes, analyze-string.

3. Schematron: most elements and attributes are a single, lower-case word (e.g., assert, rule, pattern). There is an element and an attribute with multiple words (value-of, is-a). There are two elements that use camel case (queryBinding and defaultPhase).

Notice that Schematron isn't consistent in its naming convention. Is that a bad thing? Is it a good thing to have a consistent naming convention?

Why does XML Schema and XSLT have different naming conventions? They are both W3C technologies. Does the W3C not have a policy on naming markup?

/Roger


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Robin Cover
OASIS, Director of Information Services
Editor, Cover Pages and XML Daily Newslink
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