-
machine understandable
-
From
Composite Capability/Preference Profiles (CC/PP): Structure and
Vocabularies 1.0 (2004-01-15)
| Glossary for
this source
Data that is described with tags that
associate a meaning to the data (i.e., an "author" tag would
describe the author of the document), allowing data to be searched
or combined and not just displayed.
- main
module
-
From XQuery 1.0: An XML Query
Language (2007-01-23) |
Glossary for this
source
A main module consists of a Prolog followed
by a Query Body.
- manageable
service
-
From Web Services Glossary (2004-02-11)
| Glossary for
this source
A Web service becomes a manageable service
with additional semantics, policy statements, and monitoring and
control (or management) capabilities (exposed via a management interface) all for the purpose of
managing the service.
- management
-
From Web Services Glossary (2004-02-11)
| Glossary for
this source
The utilization of the management capabilities by the management
system in order to perform monitoring of values, tracking of states
and control of entities in order to produce and maintain a stable
operational environment.
-
management capability
-
From Web Services Glossary (2004-02-11)
| Glossary for
this source
Capabilities that a Web service has for the purposes of
controlling or monitoring the service, and that can be exposed to a
management system for the sole purpose of managing the service.
-
management interface
-
From Web Services Glossary (2004-02-11)
| Glossary for
this source
- management
policy
-
From Web Services Glossary (2004-02-11)
| Glossary for
this source
-
management semantics
-
From Web Services Glossary (2004-02-11)
| Glossary for
this source
The management semantics of a service augment the semantics of a service with management-specific
semantics. These management semantics form the contract between the
provider entity and the requester entity that expresses the
effects and requirements pertaining to the management and
management policies for a service.
- MARC
record
-
From Glossary of "Weaving the Web"
(1999-07-23)
| Glossary for
this source
A standard for machine-readable library
catalogue cards.
- markup
-
From Extensible Markup Language
(XML) 1.1 (2004-02-04) |
Glossary for this
source
Markup takes the form of start-tags,
end-tags, empty-element tags, entity references, character
references, comments, CDATA section delimiters, document type
declarations, processing instructions, XML declarations, text
declarations, and any white space that is at the top level of the
document entity (that is, outside the document element and not
inside any other markup).
- markup
-
From Extensible Markup
Language (XML) 1.0 (2000-10-06) |
Glossary for this
source
Markup takes the form of start-tags,
end-tags, empty-element tags, entity references, character
references, comments, CDATA section delimiters, document type
declarations, processing instructions, [E89]XML declarations, text
declarations, and any white space that is at the top level of the
document entity (that is, outside the document element and not
inside any other markup).
- markup
declaration
-
From Extensible Markup Language
(XML) 1.1 (2004-02-04) |
Glossary for this
source
A markup declaration is an element type
declaration, an attribute-list declaration, an entity declaration,
or a notation declaration.
- markup
declaration
-
From Modularization of XHTML (2001-04-10)
| Glossary for
this source
a syntactical construct within a DTD
declaring an entity or defining a markup structure. Within XML
DTDs, there are four specific types: entity declaration defines the
binding between a mnemonic symbol and its replacement content;
element declaration constrains which element types may occur as
descendants within an element (see also content model); attribute
definition list declaration defines the set of attributes for a
given element type, and may also establish type constraints and
default values; notation declaration defines the binding between a
notation name and an external identifier referencing the format of
an unparsed entity.
- markup
declaration
-
From Extensible Markup
Language (XML) 1.0 (2000-10-06) |
Glossary for this
source
A markup declaration is an element type
declaration, an attribute-list declaration, an entity declaration,
or a notation declaration.
- markup
language
-
From Authoring Tool
Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 (2000-02-03) |
Glossary for this
source
Authors encode information using a "markup
language" such as HTML [HTML4], SVG [SVG], or MathML
[MATHML].
- markup
model
-
From Modularization of XHTML (2001-04-10)
| Glossary for
this source
the markup vocabulary (i.e., the gamut of
element and attribute names, notations, etc.) and grammar (i.e.,
the prescribed use of that vocabulary) as defined by a document
type definition (i.e., a schema) The markup model is the concrete
representation in markup syntax of the document model, and may be
defined with varying levels of strict conformity. The same document
model may be expressed by a variety of markup models.
- match
-
From Extensible Markup Language
(XML) 1.1 (2004-02-04) |
Glossary for this
source
(Of strings or names:) Two strings or names
being compared MUST be identical. Characters with multiple possible
representations in Unicode (e.g. characters with both precomposed
and base+diacritic forms) match only if they have the same
representation in both strings. No case folding is performed. (Of
strings and rules in the grammar:) A string matches a grammatical
production if it belongs to the language generated by that
production. (Of content and content models:) An element matches its
declaration when it conforms in the fashion described in the
constraint .
- match
-
From XML Schema Part 2:
Datatypes (2001-05-02)
| Glossary
for this source
(Of strings or names:) Two strings or names
being compared must be identical. Characters with multiple possible
representations in ISO/IEC 10646 (e.g. characters with both
precomposed and base+diacritic forms) match only if they have the
same representation in both strings. No case folding is performed.
(Of strings and rules in the grammar:) A string matches a
grammatical production if it belongs to the language generated by
that production.
- match
-
From Extensible Markup
Language (XML) 1.0 (2000-10-06) |
Glossary for this
source
(Of strings or names:) Two strings or names
being compared must be identical. Characters with multiple possible
representations in ISO/IEC 10646 (e.g. characters with both
precomposed and base+diacritic forms) match only if they have the
same representation in both strings. [E85]At user option,
processors may normalize such characters to some canonical form. No
case folding is performed. (Of strings and rules in the grammar:) A
string matches a grammatical production if it belongs to the
language generated by that production. (Of content and content
models:) An element matches its declaration when it conforms in the
fashion described in the constraint .
-
mathematical markup language (MathML)
-
From Mathematical
Markup Language (MathML) Version 2.0 (2001-02-21) |
Glossary for this
source
The markup language specified in this
document for describing the structure of mathematical expressions,
together with a mathematical context.