it is not for any one to use
the xml standard is maintained by a volunteer team at the w3c.
XML 4.0 is a version of XML that does not yet exist. The latest version is 1.1, visit the w3c site to see the spec
Yes, Excel is capable of opening XML files.
It is not XML, Excel is a spreadsheet software. But you could save your worksheet as XML format as well as other formats like XLS, CSV, and many more.
W3c
Assuming "XLS" means MS Excel, you can import your XML data to Excel, then filter or sort as desired.
the inner format.
tally 7.2 data convert into excel
XML uses XSL to describe data
HTML is a language used to build web pages. XML is a set of standards used to create other languages. HTML is a markup language defined by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) and primarily used to code web-pages. HTML gives a group of pre-defined tags, like <BODY> and <A> and <LINK> that have well-defined uses and generally accepted default styles in modern browsers. XML isn't a language at all. Rather, it's a particular syntax for setting up a language. It creates that idea of an element, and give those elements content and attributes. XML allows a programmer to create a language that is defined to specifically suit her needs. This is done one of several ways, but the most popular are by creating a Document Type Definition or an XML Schema. These documents define the behavior of the language itself. HTML and XML are combined in the ubiquitous XHTML 1.0 and 1.1 specifications from the W3C. XHTML is being supplanted by HTML 5. HTML 5, by default, isn't an XML based language, but you can use XML-style code by changing the MIME type to application/html+xml. A second version of XHTML was in the works at the W3C, but work stopped in December of 2010.
To indicate that the basic file format is XML in Excel 2007 and later.
It does not really have anything directly to do with Excel. SOAP stands for Simple Object Access Protocol. It is a protocol specification for exchanging structured information related to Web Services in computer networks (usually used with the Internet). It uses eXtensible Markup Language (XML) as the primary messaging format.Since Excel 2007 uses XML-based files, I suppose it would be easy for a SOAP programmer to uncompress and extract data from the Excel file. I am not aware of any major applications that do this, but it should be possible.