- Industry: Software
- Number of terms: 11119
- Number of blossaries: 0
- Company Profile:
Oracle Corporation, an enterprise software company, engages in the development, manufacture, distribution, servicing, and marketing of database, middleware, and application software worldwide.
A single piece of XML markup that delimits the start or end of an element. Tags start with < and end with >. In XML, there are start-tags (<name>), end-tags (</name>), and empty tags (<name/>).
Industry:Software
The Oracle term used to describe the Oracle XML Java Beans included in the XDK for Java. These beans include an XML Source View Bean, Tree View Bean, DOMParser Bean, Transformer Bean, and a TransViewer Bean.
Industry:Software
The address syntax that is used to create URLs and XPaths.
Industry:Software
The address that defines the location and route to a file on the Internet. URLs are used by browsers to navigate the World Wide Web and consist of a protocol prefix, port number, domain name, directory and subdirectory names, and the file name. For example http://technet.oracle.com:80/tech/xml/index.htm specifies the location and path a browser will travel to find OTN's XML site on the World Wide Web.
Industry:Software
The term used to refer to an XML document when its structure and element content is consistent with that declared in its referenced or included DTD.
Industry:Software
The term used to refer to an XML document that conforms to the syntax of the XML version declared in its XML declaration. This includes having a single root element, properly nested tags, and so forth.
Industry:Software
The cartridge within OAS that processes URLs and sends them to the appropriate cartridge.
Industry:Software
A computer communication network that serves users within a wide geographic area, such as a state or country. WANs consist of servers, workstations, communications hardware (routers, bridges, network cards, etc.), and a network operating system.
Industry:Software
The committee within the W3C that is made up of industry members that implement the recommendation process in specific Internet technology areas.
Industry:Software
An international industry consortium started in 1994 to develop standards for the World Wide Web. It is located at www.w3c.org.
Industry:Software