Mark-up language: Difference between revisions
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Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) Created page with "{{g}}A mark-up language is a computer language that uses tags to define elements within a document. It is human-readable, meaning mark-up files contain standard words, rat..." |
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{{g}}A [[mark-up language]] is a computer language that uses tags to define elements within a document. It is human-readable, meaning mark-up files contain standard words, rather than programming syntax. Many [[mark-up language]]s exist. The best is [[wiki markup]], and the most popular are HTML and XML. The ''least'' popular is [[Financial products Markup Language]], a fact which continues to grind salt into the seeping wounds of those poor souls at [[Linklaters]] who wrote the ill-fated [[2011 Equity Derivatives Definitions]] in it. | {{g}}A [[mark-up language]] is a computer language that uses tags to define elements within a document. It is human-readable, meaning mark-up files contain standard words, rather than programming syntax. Many [[mark-up language]]s exist. The best is [[wiki markup]], and the most popular are HTML and XML. The ''least'' popular is [[Financial products Markup Language]], a fact which continues to grind salt into the seeping wounds of those poor souls at [[Linklaters]] who wrote the ill-fated [[2011 Equity Derivatives Definitions]] in it. | ||
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Latest revision as of 16:32, 3 December 2019
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A mark-up language is a computer language that uses tags to define elements within a document. It is human-readable, meaning mark-up files contain standard words, rather than programming syntax. Many mark-up languages exist. The best is wiki markup, and the most popular are HTML and XML. The least popular is Financial products Markup Language, a fact which continues to grind salt into the seeping wounds of those poor souls at Linklaters who wrote the ill-fated 2011 Equity Derivatives Definitions in it.