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Markup Languages Evolution

By Rosacor
  • TeX

    TeX
    TeX is a typesetting system. It provides many commands which allow you to specify the format of your document with great detail (e.g. font styles, spacing, kerning, ligatures, etc.)
  • LaTeX

    LaTeX
    You use Latex to create documents for others to read. In that respect it is similar to Microsoft Word. But the similarities end there.
  • POSTSCRIPT

    POSTSCRIPT
    It´s primarily a language for printing documents on laser printers, but it can be adapted to produce images on other types of devices
  • SGML

    SGML
    (Standard Generalized Markup Language) is a standard for how to specify a document markup language or tag set.
  • HTML

    HTML
    It's short for "HyperText Markup Language". That may sound scary, but it simply means it is a language for describing web-pages using ordinary text.
  • XHTML

    XHTML
    XHTML stands for EXtensible HyperText Markup Language. It is the next step in the evolution of the internet. The XHTML 1.0 is the first document type in the XHTML family.
  • PDF

    PDF
    Its a file format that has captured all the elements of a printed document as an electronic image that you can view, navigate, print, or forward to someone else.
  • HTML 2.0

    HTML 2.0
    The HTML 2.0 specification includes both machine-readable public text -- SGML "code" if you will -- and human-readable text. The public text includes the DTD, an SGML declaration, and a version of the ISO Added Latin 1 entity set.
  • CSS

    CSS
    It's the language for describing the presentation of Web pages, including colors, layout, and fonts. It allows one to adapt the presentation to different types of devices, such as large screens, small screens, or printers. CSS is independent of HTML and can be used with any XML-based markup language.
  • HTML 3.2

    HTML 3.2
    HTML 3.2 is W3C's specification for HTML, developed in early `96 together with vendors including IBM, Microsoft, Netscape Communications Corporation, Novell, SoftQuad, Spyglass, and Sun Microsystems. HTML 3.2 adds widely deployed features such as tables, applets and text flow around images, while providing full backwards compatibility with the existing standard HTML 2.0.
  • XML

    XML
    It's a method of presenting information that has accepted rules and formats.
  • GML

    GML
    The Geography Markup Language (GML) is an XML grammar for expressing geographical features.
  • HTML 4.01

    HTML 4.01
    HTML 4.01 was a grand step towards an accessible, international web. Webmasters were granted many new opportunities with this round of HTML specifications, so let’s dive in and see what we can do with them.
  • HTML 5.0

    HTML 5.0
    This specification defines the 5th major revision of the core language of the World Wide Web: the Hypertext Markup Language (HTML). In this version, new features are introduced to help Web application authors, new elements are introduced based on research into prevailing authoring practices, and special attention has been given to defining clear conformance criteria for user agents in an effort to improve interoperability.
  • HTML 5.1

    HTML 5.1
    With the recent standardization of the HTML5 specification, the core vocabulary and features are being extended in four ways: 1) As modules that have been removed from the original HTML5 specifications to be standardized separately (HTML5 APIs such as Microdata or the Canvas), 2) As modules introduced as HTML5 extensions like Polyglot Markup, 3) As originally separate specifications that have been adapted as HTML5 extensions or features such as SVG, and 4) As upcoming specifications such as HTML
  • HTML 5.2 IS COMING IN 2019

    HTML 5.2 IS COMING IN 2019
    The international consortium W3C marked the following dates for release specification standards: 2014/2015 to HTML 5.0, HTML 5.1 and 2016 to 2019 for HTML 5.2