VroniPlag Wiki

This Wiki is best viewed in Firefox with Adblock plus extension.

MEHR ERFAHREN

VroniPlag Wiki


Typus
Verschleierung
Bearbeiter
Schumann
Gesichtet
Yes
Untersuchte Arbeit:
Seite: 22, Zeilen: 6-20
Quelle: DeRose 1999
Seite(n): online, Zeilen: 0
[2.1.4 XML Navigation]

XML Linking, formerly known as XLink and as XLL (the eXtensible Linking Language), is a work in progress of the Web Consortium. It is closely related to the XML Recommendation, adding functionality for high-function hypertext and hypermedia. It is now an independent Working Group, but its projects were started under the main XML Working Group, and progressed to solid Working Drafts there before being handed off to the new XML Linking Working Group.

The work of this working group has two parts: XLink provides advanced linking capabilities such as multidirectional and external linking, while the separate XPointer specifications provide a convenient and easily-understood way of describing locations in XML documents. Either can be used without the other, but they are most valuable in combination, and of course in combination with XML itself.

XLink (W3C 2001d) adds many kinds of advanced hypertext linking functionality to the Web (and other environments where it may be used). XLink provides the possibility of bi-directional links or links that lead to multiple destinations. Bidirectional links can traverse in either direction regardless of which way you went originally.


W3C (eds) 2001d, XML Linking Language (XLink) Version 1.0. W3C Recommendation 27 June 2001. [Online], Available: http://www.w3.org/TR/xlink/
Accessed: July 05 2001.

XML Linking, formerly known as XLink and as XLL (the eXtensible Linking Language), is a work in progress of the Web Consortium. It is closely related to the XML Recommendation, but adds functionality for high-function hypertext and hypermedia. It is now an independent Working Group, but its projects were started under the main XML Working Group, and progressed to solid Working Drafts there before being handed off to the new XML Linking Working Group.

The work of this WG has two parts: XLink proper provide advanced linking capabilities such as multidirectional and external linking, while the separate XPointer spec provides a convenient and easily-understood way of describing locations in XML documents. [...]

Either of XPointer and XLink can be used without the other; [...] Yet they are especially valuable in combination, and of course in combination with XML itself.

[...]

XLink adds these kinds of advanced hypertext linking functionality to the Web (and other environments where it may be used):

  • Links that lead to multiple destinations.
  • Bi-directional links (note that "go back" is not at all the same thing: a bidirectional links can be traversed either direction regardless of whether you went the other way first.
Anmerkungen

The actual source is not given.

The given reference does not lead to the copied text, see https://web.archive.org/web/20010630064508/https://www.w3.org/TR/xlink/ .

Sichter
(Schumann), WiseWoman