Though the XSLT and XQuery share the same data model, type system and function library they are created by different working groups within W3C in order to work in large collections the query language was initially created and this language deals with the large collections of XML documents and not only with large collection of the documents it can also work with the documents that are individual documents, there are many differences between these languages.
In the web development circles the XHTML is continually expanding, since there are
While a little bit out dated for its testing realm, this article holds some still useful information for the modern developer. "XML in the browser has been the subject of many spirited discussions about bleeding-edge web development. Some feel that XML in place of HTML isn’t ready for prime time due to the lack of user agents that can properly parse and render it. Others feel that XML really belongs on the server or used solely as a descriptive framework for data and has no place in the visual world of the Web which is already adequately served by
One day, Neil Crosby wanted to shadow some text using CSS. "So, the challenge was simple. Come up with some CSS which will produce drop shadows in as large a percentage of peoples’ web browsers as possible, leaving the browsers which are incapable of showing text shadows with unstyled text. Sounds simple? Well, for the most part, it was…
There are already tutorials out on the web which tell you how to produce text-shadows for various web browsers. The problem is, they all seem to focus on one particular browser, rather than producing a cross
Outside of custom editors and viewers, reading XML data is comparatively difficult. A lightweight approach for viewing XML is to attach a cascading style sheet (CSS2) to XML documents and then use a recent Web browser to view them (Mozilla is excellent, IE often adequate). developerWorks columnist David Mertz takes a look at this alternative approach in this tip.
Reading XML documents is not easy -- for a human. XML documents are all text, but the visual arrangement of parts does not necessarily correspond well to the conceptual connections between