XML brought the concept of well-formmedness to the world of structured documents. An XML document can be well-formed or valid. To be valid it just has to convey certain rules specified in a DTD or XML Schema. DTDs enable us to specify structure rules and a little bit of dynamic semantics. Additionally, XML Schemas enable us to specify some static semantics. However, there are applications where we need to specify more complex invariants or constraints. Some of these constraints are structural but many of them are non-structural and have some degree of complexity. Here is where XCSL comes into scene, enabling to specify this extra semantics. This tutorial presents an XML based architecture that enables the specification of constraints...
In this paper we present an evolution of the DTD++ schema language for XML documents. The original D...
In the past few years, a number of constraint languages for XML documents has been proposed. They ar...
With XML as with SGML, we can have structural correctness, once they provide syntactic rules to stat...
After being able to mark-up text and validate its structure according to a document type specificat...
After being able to mark-up text and validate its structure according to a grammar, we may start thi...
After being able to mark-up text and validate its structure according to a document type specificati...
The eXtensible Markup Language (XML) is rapidly becoming the industry standard format for exchanging...
International audienceOne major concept in web development using XML is validation: checking whether...
XML emerged as the (meta) mark-up language for representing, exchanging, or storing semistructured d...
ABSTRACT In the past few years, a number of constraint languages for XML documents has been proposed...
XML (eXtensible Markup Language) is a linear syntax for trees, which has gathered a remarkable amoun...
In the past few years, a number of constraint languages for XML documents has been proposed. They ar...
In the past few years, a number of constraint languages for XML documents has been proposed. They ar...
XML (eXtensible Markup Language), a linear syntax for trees, has gathered a remarkable amount of int...
Extensible Markup Language (XML), with its rich set of semantics and constraints, is becoming the do...
In this paper we present an evolution of the DTD++ schema language for XML documents. The original D...
In the past few years, a number of constraint languages for XML documents has been proposed. They ar...
With XML as with SGML, we can have structural correctness, once they provide syntactic rules to stat...
After being able to mark-up text and validate its structure according to a document type specificat...
After being able to mark-up text and validate its structure according to a grammar, we may start thi...
After being able to mark-up text and validate its structure according to a document type specificati...
The eXtensible Markup Language (XML) is rapidly becoming the industry standard format for exchanging...
International audienceOne major concept in web development using XML is validation: checking whether...
XML emerged as the (meta) mark-up language for representing, exchanging, or storing semistructured d...
ABSTRACT In the past few years, a number of constraint languages for XML documents has been proposed...
XML (eXtensible Markup Language) is a linear syntax for trees, which has gathered a remarkable amoun...
In the past few years, a number of constraint languages for XML documents has been proposed. They ar...
In the past few years, a number of constraint languages for XML documents has been proposed. They ar...
XML (eXtensible Markup Language), a linear syntax for trees, has gathered a remarkable amount of int...
Extensible Markup Language (XML), with its rich set of semantics and constraints, is becoming the do...
In this paper we present an evolution of the DTD++ schema language for XML documents. The original D...
In the past few years, a number of constraint languages for XML documents has been proposed. They ar...
With XML as with SGML, we can have structural correctness, once they provide syntactic rules to stat...