
Arabica - License Copyright 2001-2013 Jez UK Ltd All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. Neither the name of Jez UK Ltd nor the names of contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
Welcome to XPontus XML Editor website Microformats: More Meaning from Your Markup [HTML & XHTML Tu You’ve probably heard the term "microformat" and assumed it to be part of some Web 2.0 flash-in-the-pan movement. But "microformat" is not just a fancy name or trademark — it’s part of a much bigger picture. So, what are microformats? "Designed for humans first and machines second, microformats are a set of simple, open data formats built upon existing and widely adopted standards." Through the use of these widely adopted standards, publishers can encode additional semantics into the HTML markup of web pages. Microformats are all about representing semantic information encoded within a web page, allowing that information to be leveraged in ways that were possibly never conceived by the original publisher. Now, if your eyes are glazing over and any further mention of semantics, encoding, data formats, or even standards will send you straight back to YouTube, just hold on. How many copies of your user profile exist on the web? Imagine no more! So there you have it. Yahoo! The Yahoo!
XML for <SCRIPT> Cross Platform XML Parser in JavaScript Microformats: What They Are and How To Use Them | Smashing Magaz Advertisement Web 2.0 has its positive and its negative sides. Apart from tremendous technological improvements, provided by Ajax, semantically organized content and the growing popularity of RSS-Feeds, the term “Web 2.0″ still hadn’t managed to assert itself as the renewed Web rather than a new revolutionary technology as it is mistakenly being called. Consequence: many renewed techniques, which somehow seem to be related to the “new” Web, aren’t fully or properly understood. One of the new terms on the horizon is Microformats (sometimes abbreviated µF or uF) – formats, which make it possible to create meta-content which can be not only read, but also understood by machines (which was the basic idea of Semantic Web1, which is not Web 2.0). Things you should know about Microformats “Designed for humans first and machines second, microformats are a set of simple, open data formats built upon existing and widely adopted standards.” Existing Microformats Advantages of Microformats
sarissa Overview Overview Sarissa is an ECMAScript library acting as a cross-browser wrapper for native XML APIs. It offers various XML related goodies like Document instantiation, XML loading from URLs or strings, XSLT transformations, XPath queries etc and comes especially handy for people doing what is lately known as "AJAX" development. Supported browsers are Mozilla - Firefox and family, Internet Explorer with MSXML3.0 and up, Konqueror (KDE 3.3+ for sure), Safari and Opera. Konq and Safari offer no XSLT/XPath scripting support AFAIK. For a HOWTO document that provides examples of common tasks see the HOWTOs . The latest version of Sarissa can always be found on the Sourceforge project page . Credits See CHANGELOG.txt . Projects used when developing Sarissa: Apache Maven and Ant are used to build the Sarissa distributions, documentation and website. Here are some projects using Sarissa, please let us know if you would like to add yours here.
List of Microsoft XML Parser (MSXML) versions This article lists the version numbers of Microsoft XML Core Services or the Microsoft XML parser (MSXML). Different versions of MSXML are included with various Microsoft products, such as Microsoft Windows, Microsoft Internet Explorer, Microsoft Office, and Microsoft SQL Server. MSXML is also updated when you install software updates for various Microsoft products. Microsoft provides several different XML parsers. The MSXML parser is included in the Msxml.dll file, the Msxml2.dll file, the Msxml3.dll file, the Msxml4.dll file, the Msxml5.dll file, the Msxml6.dll file, and one or more resource files. Notice that Windows HTTP Services (Winhttp*.dll) is also included with some versions of MSXML. The Microsoft XML parser is a Component Object Model (COM) implementation of the W3C DOM model. MSXML versions that have been released by Microsoft Collapse this tableExpand this table MSXML versions that are included with other Microsoft products and software updates
Beautiful Soup: We called him Tortoise because he taught us. [ Download | Documentation | Hall of Fame | For enterprise | Source | Changelog | Discussion group | Zine ] You didn't write that awful page. You're just trying to get some data out of it. Beautiful Soup is here to help. Since 2004, it's been saving programmers hours or days of work on quick-turnaround screen scraping projects. Beautiful Soup is a Python library designed for quick turnaround projects like screen-scraping. Beautiful Soup provides a few simple methods and Pythonic idioms for navigating, searching, and modifying a parse tree: a toolkit for dissecting a document and extracting what you need. Beautiful Soup parses anything you give it, and does the tree traversal stuff for you. Valuable data that was once locked up in poorly-designed websites is now within your reach. Interested? Getting and giving support If you have questions, send them to the discussion group. If you use Beautiful Soup as part of your work, please consider a Tidelift subscription. Download Beautiful Soup
XUL-Enhanced Web Apps February 06, 2007 This article presents a little-known use of XUL (Mozilla's user-interface language) and shows how to take advantage of its superior performance and accessibility over HTML while maintaining cross-browser compatibility. I will illustrate this using a proof-of-concept JavaScript library that can render UI widgets using either XUL or DHTML. If possible, you will want to open this page in Firefox. Side-by-Side Tabbed Panel Example On the left we have a (very) basic DHTML implementation of tabbed panels. What is XUL? From The Joy of XUL: XUL (pronounced "zool") is Mozilla's XML-based user interface language that lets you build feature-rich cross-platform applications that can run connected to or disconnected from the Internet. The user interfaces of Firefox, Thunderbird, and other Mozilla applications are written in XUL. The rendering engine for XUL is called Gecko. You can run XUL-based applications in Firefox. Cross-Browser Compatibility XUL vs. Side-by-Side Tree Example if (!
XML Notepad 2007 Design MSDN Library Articles and Overviews XML and the .NET Framework An Introduction to the XML Tools in Visual Studio 2005 Building an XPath Visualizer with Windows Forms Troubleshooting Common Problems with the XmlSerializer What's New in System.Xml for Visual Studio 2005 and the .NET Framework 2.0 Release Code Generation in the .NET Framework Using XML Schema Combining XML Documents with XInclude Efficient Techniques for Modifying Large XML Files Exchanging XML with SQL Server 2000 and Reporting Services via Web/XML Web Services Inferring Schemas from Well-Formed XML Documents with Whidbey Beta 2 Inline Schemas Resolving the Unknown: Building Custom XmlResolvers in the .NET Framework XmlCsvReader Implementation XML Indexing Part 1: XML IDs, XSLT Keys and IndexingXPathNavigator XML Notepad 2007 Design XML Reader with Bookmarks XPath Querying Over DataSets with the DataSetNavigator Programming with XML Using Visual Basic 9.0 .NET XML Power Tools Extreme XML XML Notepad 2007 Design Chris LovettMicrosoft August 2006