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SGML

SGML

The Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML) is a metalanguage in which one can define markup languages for documents. SGML is a descendant of IBM's Generalized Markup Language (GML), developed in the 1960s by Charles Goldfarb, Edward Mosher and Raymond Lorie (whose surname initials also happen to be GML). SGML should not be confused with the Geography Markup Language (GML) developed by the Open GIS Consortium; cf.

SGML provides a variety of markup syntaxes that can be used for many applications. By changing the SGML Declaration one does not even need to use "angle brackets" although they are the norm, the so-called concrete reference syntax.

SGML was originally designed to enable the sharing of machine-readable documents in large projects in government and the aerospace industry, which have to remain readable for several decades-a very long time in information technology. It has also been used extensively in the printing and publishing industries, but its complexity has prevented its widespread application for small-scale general-purpose use.

The text above is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License (GNU FDL).
It uses material from the Wikipedia article "SGML".

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Books about SGML
Learning XML, Second Edition
Learning XML, Second Edition by Erik T. Ray

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The SGML Handbook
The SGML Handbook by Charles F. Goldfarb

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XML Bible (2nd Edition)
XML Bible (2nd Edition) by Elliotte Rusty Harold

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