As a programmer, processing pure XML is easier that HTML. This is because XML follows a very strict set of standards. HTML (such as HTML 4 or 5) does not. For instance, all XML tags close, either by a closing pair, or a "self-closing" tag. e.g.:
<tag></tag>
Or
<tag />
Whereas HTML tags such as line-break and image don't follow the same pattern.
<img>
<br>
By adhere to stricter rules, XML is easier for me to parse.
XML has nothing to do with HTML even though both the languages are based on tags. XML is mostly useful to represent data while HTML is useful for representing UI. XML is easy to parse and has a very strict syntax to be followed. HTML also has syntax, but the browsers forgive if the HTML is not perfect. This makes HTML parsing difficult. To over come this issue XHTML standard has come up, where HTML should follow XML syntax.
There was no XML in HTML 4, and you can only add XML to HTML 5 if you reset the content MIME type. XML hasn't changed. But XML is a language used to define other languages. XML was used to define the standards for XHTML 1.0, the successor to HTML 4. The rules of XML apply in XHTML, because the language is based off of XML. These rules are not, in any way, part of HTML 4. HTML 5 is not, by default, an XML based language. But there is a version that allows one to use the XML (or XHTML) style serialization. If you do this, however, you have to deliver the document using an XML MIME type, like application/html+xml. (Normally, this involves messing with the server a bit.) See the related link for HTML 5 Doctor's take on XML serialization in HTML 5, as well as some other, useful links.
Advanced HTML code includes features like authentication. It authenticates any input type field in code.
an xml value can be anything, its up to as xml is not a semantic language like html.
<?xml version="1.0"?>
XML is more strict. For HTML, doing <b><i></b></i> wouldn't matter. That would be invalid XML. Also, XML has no set tags. It's for storing and retrieving set data, that can be used with JavaScript code.
You mean the file extension, right? HTML: .html or .htm XML: .xml
There was no XML in HTML 4, and you can only add XML to HTML 5 if you reset the content MIME type. XML hasn't changed. But XML is a language used to define other languages. XML was used to define the standards for XHTML 1.0, the successor to HTML 4. The rules of XML apply in XHTML, because the language is based off of XML. These rules are not, in any way, part of HTML 4. HTML 5 is not, by default, an XML based language. But there is a version that allows one to use the XML (or XHTML) style serialization. If you do this, however, you have to deliver the document using an XML MIME type, like application/html+xml. (Normally, this involves messing with the server a bit.) See the related link for HTML 5 Doctor's take on XML serialization in HTML 5, as well as some other, useful links.
XHTML. Its full name is eXtensible HyperText Markup Language.
Advanced HTML code includes features like authentication. It authenticates any input type field in code.
xml can be written straight into html code and vice versa using the correct syntax, ie your html in here and your xml in here
XML is different from HTML in many ways. XML can be used mainly for mobile designing while HTML for web designing.
XML probably will not replace HTML. XML is a language to define categories of data. HTML is a language to define format.
XML training courses are used to teach people how to apply XML in software. It's an enhanced version of HTML that has seen heavy usage recently, especially in cell phones.
HTML and XML are scripting languages. These languages help in designing for mobiles and web.
HTML and XML both are markup languages. These languages use tags for functionality.
basikly xhtml is a mics of html and xml. the difference in html and xhtml is that xhtml is a more strict on the syntax and defined as a xml document. xml is a self defined language... in short it is a strikter html in xml format...
an xml value can be anything, its up to as xml is not a semantic language like html.