Joris Gillis wrote:
[color=blue]
> When studying informatics or other computer-related courses at
> university, is XML a part of the course?[/color]
No. Are there courses at University about using an editor ?
[color=blue]
> Or is the concept of XML (or
> other W3C standards) not even mentioned in a footnote? Is XML something
> you have to discover yourself?[/color]
XML is only a data format. Therefore it is (at best) worth
a small section in an appendix of a scientific text book.
XML is not science, it is technology.
[color=blue]
> What, do you think, is the importance of XML (and applications like
> SVG)? Is it revolutionary, elightening and desirable or is hot air or
> more of the same? Maybe I'm overestimating the importance. (I hope not)[/color]
SVG seems to be an irrelevant format if you are talking
about real life (I mean the Internet Explorer and Mozilla).
XML does not look revolutionary to me. Some ideologists
see it differently of course. End users will most likely
never see it directly. XML data is meant to be exchanged
between machines and _not_ presented directly to the user
of a GUI.
Watch this and follow some links:
http://xml.coverpages.org/xmlApplications.html
There are tons of dead links behind it.
During the Internet Boom everyone thought that all
data has to be exchanged with XML in the future.
DNA sequences of Genomes for examples. Look at what
has come out of it. XML today is irrelevant in the
databases of Genomic data.
[color=blue]
> Maybe someone can give some links to recent articles about this or post
> comments on this thread.
> Thanks in advance.[/color]
Here in Germany, the magazine iX has just published
a special edition about XML:
http://www.heise.de/ix/special/04/01/
iX is not a scientific magazine, but a magazine
mostly for developers in the Unix field. If they
publish a special edition, they obviously think
that XML is of some importance.