New! Recent Issue online Web Security: A Matter of Trust
Current Issue in print
Upcoming Issue
Search
|
The World Wide Web Journal (W3J) is chartered to help people implement open systems on the Web. Each issue provides a balance of specifications from W3C and implementation guides that explain how to use the technology. Also included are technical papers from around the world, interviews, and news stories. For more information, see About the W3J. UPDATES The Web Journal will no longer be published in print by O'Reilly. This site will remain and we are working out plans for the future of the Journal online. If you have any questions about the Journal, please send them to Dale Dougherty. Extensible Markup Language (XML)
Document Object Model
VOLUME II, ISSUE 4:
The Extensible Markup Language (XML) is an important new standard emerging for structured documents on the Web. XML extends HTML beyond a limited tagset and adapts SGML (Standardized General Markup Language), making it easier for developers to write programs that process this markup and providing for a richer, more complex encoding of information. The importance of XML is indicated by support from companies such as Microsoft and Netscape. This volume of the World Wide Web Journal, edited by Dan Connolly, is a first look at the technical specifications and early applications of XML. Articles range from user implementation guides, to new applications, to philosophy and future technology. See the Table of Contents for a complete listing.
|