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As you saw previously, one way or another it is necessary to resolve the conflict
between the title
element defined in slideshow.dtd and the
one defined in xhtml.dtd. In the previous exercise, you hyphenated the
name in order to put it into a different "namespace". In this section,
you'll see how to use the XML namespace
standard to do the same thing without renaming the element.
Note: At this point in time, the Java XML parsers do not support namespaces. This section is for information only.
The primary goal of the namespace specification is to let the document author
tell the parser which DTD to use when parsing a given element. The parser can
then consult the appropriate DTD for an element definition. Of course, it is
also important to keep the parser from aborting when a "duplicate"
definition is found, and yet still generate an error if the document references
an element like title
without qualifying it (identifying
the DTD to use for the definition).
Note:
Namespaces apply to attributes as well as to elements. In this section, we consider only elements. For more information on attributes, consult the namespace specification at http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/.
To define a namespace that an element belongs to, it is necessary to add an
attribute to the element's definition,
where the attribute name is xmlns
("xml namespace").
For example, you could do that in slideshow.dtd by adding an entry like
the following in the title
element's attribute-list definition:
<!ELEMENT title (%inline;)*> <!ATTLIST title xmlns CDATA #FIXED "http://www.example.com/slideshow" >
Declaring the attribute as FIXED
has several important features:
It prevents the document from specifying any non-matching value for the
xmlns
attribute (as described in Defining
Attributes in the DTD).
The element defined in this DTD is made unique (because the parser understands
the xmlns
attribute), so it does not conflict with an element
that has the same name in another DTD. That allows multiple DTDs to use
the same element name without generating a parser error.
When a document specifies the xmlns
attribute for a tag, the
document selects the element definition with a matching attribute.
To be thorough, every element name in your DTD would get the exact same attribute,
with the same value. (Here, though, we're only concerned about the title
element.) Note, too, that you are using a CDATA
string to supply
the URI. In this case, we've specified an
URL. But you could also specify a URN
, possibly by specifying a prefix like urn:
instead of http:
.
(URNs are currently being researched. They're not seeing a lot of action at
the moment, but that could change in the future.)
When a document uses an element name that exists in only one of the .dtd
files it references, the name does not need to be qualified. But when an element
name that has multiple definitions is used, some sort of qualification is a
necessity.
Note:
In point of fact, an element name is always qualified by it's default namespace, as defined by name of the DTD file it resides in. As long as there as is only one definition for the name, the qualification is implicit.
You qualify a reference to an element name by specifying the xmlns attribute, as shown here:
<title xmlns="http://www.example.com/slideshow" Overview </title>
The specified namespace applies to that element, and to any elements contained within it.
When you only need one namespace reference, it's not such a big deal. But when
you need to make the same reference several times, adding xmlns
attributes becomes unwieldy. It also makes it harder to change the name of the
namespace at a later date.
The alternative is to define a namespace prefix, which as simple as specifying xmlns, a colon (:) and the prefix name before the attribute value, as shown here:
<sl:slideshow xmlns:sl='http:/www.example.com/slideshow' ...> ... </sl:slideshow>
This definition sets up sl
as a prefix that can be used to qualify
the current element name and any element within it. Since the prefix can be
used on any of the contained elements, it makes the most sense to define it
on the XML document's root element, as shown here.
Note:
The namespace URI can contain characters which are not valid in an XML name, so it cannot be used as a prefix directly. The prefix definition associates an XML name with the URI, which allows the prefix name to be used instead. It also makes it easier to change references to the URI in the future.
When the prefix is used to qualify an element name, the end-tag also includes the prefix, as highlighted here:
<sl:slideshow xmlns:sl='http:/www.example.com/slideshow' ...> ... <slide> <sl:title>Overview<sl:title> </slide> ... </sl:slideshow>
Finally, note that multiple prefixes can be defined in the same element, as shown here:
<sl:slideshow xmlns:sl='http:/www.example.com/slideshow' xmlns:xhtml='urn:...'> ... </sl:slideshow>
With this kind of arrangement, all of the prefix definitions are together
in one place, and you can use them anywhere they are needed in the document.
This example also suggests the use of URN to define the xhtml
prefix,
instead of an URL. That definition would conceivably allow the app to reference
a local copy of the XHTML DTD or some mirrored version, with a potentially beneficial
impact on performance..
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