XML vs HTML | Website Development, Web Design Company, Creative Design Solutions Malaysia : Cstudio Web Design

HTML is a markup language that is used to design web pages. It is written in predefined tag elements. Its primary purpose is to display data with focus on how the data looks. XML is a markup language whose primary purpose is to transport and store data. It is a language that can be used to develop new languages and define other languages. It does not have a predefined set of tags, and allows the developer to customize tags.

 

HyperText Markup Language (HTML) is a well known mark up language used to develop web pages. It has been around for a long time and is commonly used in webpage design. XML or Extensible Markup Language defines a set of rules for encoding documents in a format that can be read by both, human and computer.

 

 HTML is written using HTML elements, which consist of tags, primarily and opening tag and a closing tag. The data between these tags is usually the content. The main objective of HTML is to allow web browsers to interpret and display the content written between the tags. The tags are designed to describe the page content. HTML comes with predefined tags. These days, web pages are rarely only designed using HTML.

 

XML on the other hand, is a mark up language that is fairly new and was launched in 1996 as an adaptation of SGML (Standard Generalized Markup Language). The main purpose of XML is to be an independent hardware tool used to transport and store data with focus on what the data is. XML removes the constraint of sticking to pre-designed tags and gives developers the freedom to design new tags. It was developed to create standardized specifications for creating custom mark-up languages. XML-based languages include RSS, Atom and XHTML. It is neither a programming language not a presentation language. It is known as meta-language, or a language that can be used to define other languages.

 

The XML is well-formed and has strict set of rules. Well-formed generally means that it satisfies a list of syntax rules provided in its specification. Containing only properly  encoded legal Unicode characters, no use of special syntax characters, element tags are correctly nested, etc are a few example of the syntax rules. It also includes a well-formed declaration that states the type of document it is and what processing rules should be applied.

 

In HTML, when a page created, the processor tries to make sense of the page and generates the content of the page. It does not require strict rules regarding the format of the page. It will generate the page best to its ability even with errors present. In XML, however, if certain rules are incorrect or the processor cannot comprehend something, the processor will generate an error code and terminate processing the file. It includes an error-handling mechanism referred to as ‘draconian’. Further specifications of both languages, including limitations are listed in the table below.

 


HTML

XML

Definition

Markup language for displaying web pages in a web browser. Designed to display data with focus on how the data looks

Markup language defines a set of rules for encoding documents that can be read by both humans and machines. Designed with focus on storing and transporting data.

Date when invented

1990

1996

Extended from

SGML

SGML

Type

Static

Dynamic

Usage

Display a web page

Transport data between the application and the database. To develop other mark up languages.

Processing/Rules

No strict rules. Browser will still generate data to the best of its ability

Strict rules must be followed or processor will terminate processing the file

Language type

Presentation

Neither presentation, nor programming

Tags

Predefined

Custom tags can be created by the author

White Space

Cannot preserve white space

Preserves white space

Limitations

Data does not know itself very well. Data cannot change in response to environment. Data cannot be easily maintained. Cannot store or call on variables. Lacks the capability to define new structures by defining relationships between classes. Tags are not useful for exchanging the document between applications.

Cannot be used as a subtype of a sql_variant instance.

Does not support casting or converting to either text or ntext. Does not support the following column and table constraints. XML provides its own encoding. Collations apply to string types only. Cannot be compared or sorted. Cannot be used in Distributed Partitioned Views. Not well supported by browsers.

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