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  • From: Stephen Cameron <steve.cameron.62@g...>
  • To: John Cowan <johnwcowan@g...>
  • Date: Wed, 13 Nov 2013 17:57:46 +1100

 
Hi John,

I was just struck by the irony of James' views then, vs the second proposition at the start of this thread.

Personally I think that XML is just prey to the winds of IT fashion and will come back strong at some point. Maybe MicroXML has some merit but its not that big a deal for me.

Here is a little <?xml-stylesheet?> treat for you (I hope): http://collinta.com.au/xsltforms/build.xml.

Regards
Steve






On Wed, Nov 13, 2013 at 2:08 PM, John Cowan <johnwcowan@g...> wrote:



On Tue, Nov 12, 2013 at 7:20 PM, Stephen Cameron <steve.cameron.62@g...> wrote:

From an interview with James Clark, entitled:

JC: I knew how insanely complex writing an SGML parser was. SGML is really doing something very simple. It's providing a standard way to represent a tree, and your nodes have a label with names and they can have attributes. That's all it's doing. It's not a complicated concept.


Of course, that's really MicroXML, not XML.

[Personally, I wish people would stop fueling this notion of XML being too complex.]

James wouldn't agree: see his manifesto at http://blog.jclark.com/2010/12/microxml.html and the MicroXML CG draft at https://dvcs.w3.org/hg/microxml/raw-file/tip/spec/microxml.html.

-- 
GMail doesn't have rotating .sigs, but you can see mine at http://www.ccil.org/~cowan/signatures



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