XML White Papers
About XML Documents in Word
Overview Extensible Markup Language (XML) (Extensible Markup Language (XML): A condensed form of Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML) that enables developers to create customized tags that offer flexibility in organizing and presenting information.) enables the user to organize and work with documents and data in ways that were previously impossible or very difficult. By using custom XML schemas, one can now identify and extract specific pieces of business data from ordinary business documents. For example, an invoice that contains the name and address of a customer or a report that contains last quarter's financial results are no longer static documents. The information they contain can be passed to a database or reused elsewhere, outside of the documents.
| Publisher | Microsoft Tips | File Format | HTML |
|---|---|---|---|
| Date Published | December 2007 | ||
| Format | White Papers | ||
| Topics | |||
Download a free trial of Adobe® Designer 6.0 today!
With Adobe Designer 6.0, you'll create forms that combine high-fidelity presentation with XML-data handling to automate data capture and processing. Adobe Designer 6.0 intelligent forms accelerate the flow of information to...
MSDN Webcast: Optimizing and Extending ASP.NET AJAX (Level 300)
Microsoft ASP.NET (AJAX) makes it incredibly easy to add Asynchronous JavaScript and XML (AJAX) magic to applications. But did someone knew that a few lines of hand-written code can be...
IAA White Paper: Insurance Application Architecture (IAA)
This white paper outlines the concrete uses of the different models as well as the specific characteristics and comparative advantages of the IAA approach. IAA has been used as the...
Essential Silverlight: XAML Basics
XAML is an XML dialect, so the paper uses a lot of angle brackets throughout. In this paper, one will have a look at the most important XAML elements. It...
Using XMLEncoder
This paper covers advanced use of XMLEncoder, showing how it can be configured to create archives of any Java objects - even when they don't follow the JavaBeans conventions. The...



