SGML
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|subcat=Markup | |subcat=Markup | ||
− | |mimetypes= | + | |mimetypes={{mimetype|application/sgml}}, {{mimetype|text/sgml}} |
− | {{mimetype|application/sgml}} | + | |
− | {{mimetype|text/sgml}} | + | |
|extensions={{ext|sgml}} | |extensions={{ext|sgml}} | ||
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'''SGML''' (Standard Generalized Markup Language) is a general format for markup languages descended from a 1960s IBM effort ("Generalized Markup Language"). It uses Document Type Definitions ([[DTD]]s) to define the specifics of a particular markup format. [[HTML]] was originally developed as a version of SGML, but has drifted away from this and the current HTML 5 is explicitly no longer based on SGML. [[XML]] is a somewhat simplified variant of SGML. | '''SGML''' (Standard Generalized Markup Language) is a general format for markup languages descended from a 1960s IBM effort ("Generalized Markup Language"). It uses Document Type Definitions ([[DTD]]s) to define the specifics of a particular markup format. [[HTML]] was originally developed as a version of SGML, but has drifted away from this and the current HTML 5 is explicitly no longer based on SGML. [[XML]] is a somewhat simplified variant of SGML. |
Revision as of 15:01, 28 October 2016
SGML (Standard Generalized Markup Language) is a general format for markup languages descended from a 1960s IBM effort ("Generalized Markup Language"). It uses Document Type Definitions (DTDs) to define the specifics of a particular markup format. HTML was originally developed as a version of SGML, but has drifted away from this and the current HTML 5 is explicitly no longer based on SGML. XML is a somewhat simplified variant of SGML.