> Because DTD have special rules associated with them, such as those relating
> to case sensitivity, keywords, names, etc. One advantage of having a
> different syntax is that it is easier to remember that these rules apply
> when you are using that syntaz, but do not apply when entering XML coded data.
This doesn't follow at all. First, instances are just as case sensitive as
DTDs. Second, there are keywords and everywhere...
In fact, the distinction is entirely bogus.
The question should be, which syntax is more effective.
I don't see either as ideal.
Charles said that different sorts of information should have different
syntaxes, but in the document a chapter title has the same syntax as an
author's name, a date, an image... and these things may all have different
consumers.
If neither syntax is ideal, having only one of them is a definite advantage.
Lee
-- Liam Quin -- the barefoot typographer -- Toronto lq-text: freely available Unix text retrievalemail address: l i a m q u i n, at host: i n t e r l o g dot c o m
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