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    Document Type Definition (DTD), defined slightly differently within the XML and SGML specifications, is one of several SGML and XML schema languages, and is also the term used to describe a document or portion thereof that is authored in the DTD language. A DTD is primarily used for the expression of a schema via a set of declarations that conform to a particular markup syntax and that describe a class, or type, of SGML or XML documents, in terms of constraints on the structure of those documents. A DTD may also declare constructs that are not always required to establish document structure, but that may affect the interpretation of some documents.
    While DTD is native to the SGML and XML specifications, its capabilities are somewhat limited compared to more modern schema languages such as XML Schema and RELAX NG.

    As an expression of a schema, a DTD specifies, in effect, the syntax of an "application" of SGML or XML, such as the derivative language HTML or XHTML. This syntax is usually a less general form of the syntax of SGML or XML.

    In a DTD, the structure of a class of documents is described via element and attribute-list declarations. Element declarations name the allowable set of elements within the document, and specify whether and how declared elements and runs of character data may be contained within each element. Attribute-list declarations name the allowable set of attributes for each declared element, including the type of each attribute value, if not an explicit set of valid value(s).


        Document Type Definition
            Associating DTDs with documents
                Examples
            XML DTDs and schema validation
                Differences between SGML and XML DTD syntax
            XML DTD Example
            DTD criticisms and alternatives
            See also

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    Associating DTDs with documents

    A DTD is associated with a particular document via a Document Type Declaration, which is a bit of markup that appears near the start of the associated document. The declaration establishes that the document is an instance of the type defined by the referenced DTD.

    The declarations in a DTD are divided into an internal subset and an external subset. The declarations in the internal subset are embedded in the Document Type Declaration in the document itself. The declarations in the external subset are located in a separate text file. The external subset may be referenced via a public identifier and/or a system identifier. Programs for reading documents may not be required to read the external subset.

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    Examples

    Here is an example of a Document Type Declaration containing both public and system identifiers:



    Here is an example of a Document Type Declaration that encapsulates an internal subset consisting of a single entity declaration:

    >

    All HTML 4.01 documents are expected to conform to one of three SGML DTDs. The public identifiers of these DTDs are constant and are as follows:


    The system identifiers of these DTDs, if present in the Document Type Declaration, will be URI references. System identifiers can vary, but are expected to point to a specific set of declarations in a resolvable location. SGML allows for public identifiers to be mapped to system identifiers in catalogs that are optionally made available to the URI resolvers used by document parsing software.

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    XML DTDs and schema validation

    The XML DTD syntax is one of several XML schema languages.

    A common misconception is that non-validating XML parsers are not required to read DTDs, when in fact, the DTD must still be scanned for correct syntax as well as for declarations of entities and default attributes. A non-validating parser may, however, elect not to read external entities, including the external subset of the DTD. If the XML document depends on declarations found only in external entities, it should assert standalone="no" in its XML declaration.

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    Differences between SGML and XML DTD syntax

    The syntax of SGML and XML DTDs are very similar, but not identical.

      The SGML declaration for HTML 4.01, for example, allows its DTD to specify whether elements require start and end tags, which would be impossible in an XML DTD. Consider the following element declaration for HTML 4.01:
      BR - O EMPTY -- forced line break -->
      The - after the element name "BR" means a start tag,
      , is required and the O after that makes the end tag,
      optional (in fact, the W3C recommendation forbids the end tag). On the other hand, XML languages share a common SGML declaration, one that simplifies the DTD syntax but disallows any tag omission (XML itself also prohibits comments within the declaration such as -- forced line break --). Thus, the XHTML 1.0 specification which specifies an XML-based version of HTML, only allows for

      and the element must be written as either

      or in a special shortened format as
      . In addition, XML element tags are case-sensitive, so the HTML BR element '''must''' be written in lowercase in XHTML as defined above (br).

      Element declarations in XML cannot exclude other elements. For example, in HTML,
      -(FORM) -- interactive form -->
      defines a FORM element that includes certain elements (with an SGML entity) but, due to the -(FORM) part, cannot include other FORMs. In XHTML the FORM is thus defined as

      which simply includes certain elements.


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    XML DTD Example

    An example of a very simple XML DTD to describe a list of persons is given below:

    )>
    PCDATA)> PCDATA)> PCDATA)> PCDATA)>
    Taking this line by line, it says:
      people_list is a valid element name, and an instance of such an element contains any number of person elements. The
        denotes there can be 0 or more person elements within the people_list element.
      person is a valid element name, and an instance of such an element contains one element named name, followed by one named birthdate (optional), then gender (also optional) and socialsecuritynumber (also optional). The ? indicates that an element is optional. The reference to the name element name has no ?, so a person element must contain a name element.
      name is a valid element name, and an instance of such an element contains character data.
      birthdate is a valid element name, and an instance of such an element contains character data.
      gender is a valid element name, and an instance of such an element contains character data.
      socialsecuritynumber is a valid element name, and an instance of such an element contains character data.

    An example of an XML file which makes use of and conforms to this DTD follows. It assumes the DTD is identifiable by the relative URI reference "example.dtd":





    Fred Bloggs
    27/11/2008
    Male



    It is possible to render this in an XML-enabled browser (such as IE5 or Mozilla) by pasting and saving the DTD component above to a text file named example.dtd and the XML file to a differently-named text file, and opening the XML file with the browser. The files should both be saved in the same directory. However, many browsers do not check that an XML document conforms to the rules in the DTD; they are only required to check that the DTD is syntactically correct. For security reasons, they may also choose not to read the external DTD.

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    DTD criticisms and alternatives

    While DTD support in XML tools is widespread due to its inclusion in the XML 1.0 standard, it is seen as limited for the following reasons:

      No support for newer features of XML — most importantly, namespaces.
      Lack of expressivity. Certain formal aspects of an XML document cannot be captured in a DTD.

    Three newer XML schema languages that are much more powerful are increasingly favored over DTDs:

      XML Schema, also referred to as XML Schema Definition (XSD), has achieved Recommendation status within the W3C.
      RELAX NG, which is also a part of DSDL, is an ISO international standard.

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    See also
     
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Document Type Definition". link