Frequently Asked Questions
XML
So XML is Just Like HTML?
No. In HTML, both the tag semantics and the tag set are fixed. The W3C, in conjunction with browser vendors and the WWW community, is constantly working to extend the definition of HTML to allow new tags to keep pace with changing technology and to bring variations in presentation (stylesheets) to the Web. However, these changes are always rigidly confined by what the browser vendors have implemented and by the fact that backward compatibility is paramount. In addition, for people who want to disseminate information widely, features supported by only the latest releases of Netscape and Internet Explorer are not useful.
XML specifies neither semantics nor a tag set. In fact XML, is really a meta-language for describing markup languages. In other words, XML provides a facility to define tags and the structural relationships between them. Since there's no predefined tag set, there can't be any preconceived semantics. All of the semantics of an XML document will be defined either by the applications that process them or by stylesheets.
Our Services
- Professional Translation Services
- Multilingual Desktop Publishing
- DITA and XML Content Management
- Localization
- Voice over, Dubbing & Subtitling
- Website Optimization
- Software Testing
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is internationalization?
- InDesign through Trados StoryCollector?
- History of Desktop publishing?
- Translating Assets and Tasks Offline?
- How To Load An External Text File Into Flash For Dynamic Webpages?
- What is Interleaf?
- How to convert an .idu file to Quicksilver 3.0 format?
- What is an STF file?
- How to prepare a QuarkXPress project for translation?
- Working with Story Collector in QuarkXPress?
- Problems with True Type fonts from Quark 7 to Quark 6?
- Setting Up Service Desk?
- InDesign CS crashes when you try to open an INX file from InDesign CS2?