Interview Questions Answers.ORG
Interviewer And Interviewee Guide
Interviews
Quizzes
Home
Quizzes
Interviews Coding/Programming Interviews:Active Template Library (ATL)ActiveXApplication DeveloperArtificial intelligenceAssemblyAssociate Software EngineerAWKAWTC ProgrammingC++ ProgrammingCGI PerlCGI ProgrammingCMMICobolCritical ReasoningData Structures TreesDCOM COMDelphiDTDE4XExtensible Stylesheet Language (XSL)FortranFull-Stack DeveloperHaskellHTML DOMILUIPhone DeveloperJasper Reports DeveloperJava DeveloperLisp ProgrammingLotus NotesMicrosoft Foundation Class (MFC)Mobile DeveloperMVC DeveloperNode.jsOOPPascalPerl ProgrammingPHPPHP DeveloperProgrammingProgramming AlgorithmsProgramming ConceptsPythonRubyRuby on RailsRuby on Rails DeveloperSenior Front End DeveloperSenior Software DeveloperSignature ProgramSOASocket ProgrammingSoftware Development EngineerSoftware engineeringSr. PHP ProgrammerStack And QueueSTLSwift DeveloperTCL (Tool Command Language)Team Leader Android DeveloperUMLUnity 2D Games DeveloperUnity 3D DeveloperUnity DeveloperVBA (Visual Basic for Applications)Visual Basic (VB)Visual C++Web DevelopmentWin32APIWindows ProgramingWordPress DevelopmentWSDLXFormsXHTMLXLinkXMLXPathXQueryXSL-FOXSLT
Copyright © 2018. All Rights Reserved
XML Interview Question:
Which parts of an XML document are case-sensitive?
Submitted by: AdministratorAd
All of it, both markup and text. This is significantly different from HTML and most other SGML applications. It was done to allow markup in non-Latin-alphabet languages, and to obviate problems with case-folding in writing systems which are caseless.
► Element type names are case-sensitive: you must follow whatever combination of upper- or lower-case you use to define them (either by first usage or in a DTD or Schema). So you can't say <BODY>?</body>: upper- and lower-case must match; thus <Img/>, <IMG/>, and <img/> are three different element types;
► For well-formed XML documents with no DTD, the first occurrence of an element type name defines the casing;
► Attribute names are also case-sensitive, for example the two width attributes in <PIC width="7in"/> and <PIC WIDTH="6in"/> (if they occurred in the same file) are separate attributes, because of the different case of width and WIDTH;
► Attribute values are also case-sensitive. CDATA values (eg Url="MyFile.SGML") always have been, but NAME types (ID and IDREF attributes, and token list attributes) are now case-sensitive as well;
► All general and parameter entity names (eg Á), and your data content (text), are case-sensitive as always.
Submitted by: Administrator
► Element type names are case-sensitive: you must follow whatever combination of upper- or lower-case you use to define them (either by first usage or in a DTD or Schema). So you can't say <BODY>?</body>: upper- and lower-case must match; thus <Img/>, <IMG/>, and <img/> are three different element types;
► For well-formed XML documents with no DTD, the first occurrence of an element type name defines the casing;
► Attribute names are also case-sensitive, for example the two width attributes in <PIC width="7in"/> and <PIC WIDTH="6in"/> (if they occurred in the same file) are separate attributes, because of the different case of width and WIDTH;
► Attribute values are also case-sensitive. CDATA values (eg Url="MyFile.SGML") always have been, but NAME types (ID and IDREF attributes, and token list attributes) are now case-sensitive as well;
► All general and parameter entity names (eg Á), and your data content (text), are case-sensitive as always.
Submitted by: Administrator
Copyright 2007-2025 by Interview Questions Answers .ORG All Rights Reserved.
https://InterviewQuestionsAnswers.ORG.

https://InterviewQuestionsAnswers.ORG.
