General-purpose markup language explained

A general-purpose markup language is a markup language that is used for more than one purpose or situation. Other, more specialized domain-specific markup languages are often based upon these languages. For example, HTML 4.1 and earlier are domain-specific markup languages (for webpages), and are based on the syntax of SGML, which is a general-purpose markup language.

List

Notable general-purpose markup languages include:

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Szeredi . Péter . Lukácsy . Gergely . The Semantic Web Explained: The Technology and Mathematics behind Web 3.0 . 11 September 2014 . Cambridge University Press . 978-0-521-70036-8 . 55 . 18 November 2024 . en.