ad boşluğu

listen to the pronunciation of ad boşluğu
Türkçe - İngilizce
(Bilgisayar) namespace
To categorize by placing into a namespace

SOAP adheres to extensive namespacing and attribute specification tags.

In general, a namespace is an abstract container providing context for the items (names, or technical terms, or words) it holds and allows disambiguation of items having the same name (residing in different namespaces)
A mechanism to resolve naming conflicts between elements in an XML document when each comes from a different vocabulary; it allows the commingling of like tag names from different namespaces A namespace identifies an XML vocabulary defined within a Uniform Resource Name (URN) An attribute on an element, attribute, or entity reference associates a short name with the URN that defines the namespace; that short name is then used as a prefix to the element, attribute, or entity reference name to uniquely identify the namespace Namespace references have scope All child nodes beneath the node that specifies the namespace inherit that namespace This allows nonqualified names to use the default namespace
A collection of naming contexts that are grouped together
A collection of identifiers, such as variable names
The set of names accessible at a given point in a program
A mechanism that allows developers to uniquely qualify the element names and relationships and to make these names recognizable By doing so, they can avoid name collisions on elements that have the same name but are defined in different vocabularies They allow tags from multiple namespaces to be mixed, which is essential if data is coming from multiple sources Namespaces ensure that element names do not conflict, and clarify who defined which term A namespace identifies an XML vocabulary defined within a URN An attribute on an element, attribute, or entity reference associates a short name with the URN that defines the namespace; that short name is then used as a prefix to the element, attribute, or entity reference name to uniquely identify the namespace Namespace references have scope All child nodes beneath the node that specifies the namespace inherit that namespace This allows nonqualified names to use the default namespace See also RDF namespace
All the nodes in a domain's large inverted tree, beginning at the root ( ) domain In a virtual private network, the informal name for the addresses contained in it
XML syntax that prevents name collisions in documents by qualifying the name of an element or attribute with a namespace URI and prefix The prefix xmlns is associated with XML namespaces
The area of a program in which particular identifiers are visible Java uses packages to provide namespaces, and its visibility rules - private, package, protected, public - variously contain identifiers within namespaces
A unique identifier used for qualifying element and attribute names used in XML A namespace allows you to retain unique element names by simply providing a two-part naming system through the use of element names associated with a Universal Resource Identifier (URI) The specific location may not actually contain any data about the tags, but simply allows more than one use of a specific tag name For example, if you are using more than one DTD and both have a <firstname> element, you can distinguish between the two by using namespaces For more information, go to the W3C Web site (http: //www w3 org)
A declaration that identifies the features used in a SMIL presentation For SMIL 2 0 and higher, the <smil> tag must declare a namespace
An agreed-upon context in which names (identifiers) can be defined Within a given namespace, all names must be unique
A way to classify pages Wikipedia has namespaces for encyclopedia articles, pages about Wikipedia (Wikipedia: ), user pages (User: ), special pages (Special: ) and talk pages (Talk: , Wikipedia talk: , and User talk: ) See Wikipedia: Namespace
A unique name that identifies an organization that has developed an XML schema A namespace is identified via a Uniform Resource Identifier (a URL or URN) The use of namespaces allows the definition of an element to be unambiguously identified with a URI, even though the label "title" alone might occur in many metadata sets In more general terms, one can think of any closed set of names as a namespace Thus, a controlled vocabulary such as the Library of Congress Subject Headings, a set of metadata elements such as DC, or the set of all URLs in a given domain can be thought of as a namespace that is managed by the authority that is in charge of that particular set of terms" Dublin Core Metadata Glossary, Final Draft, Feb 24, 2001, Online Available at http: //library csun edu/mwoodley/dublincoreglossary html
A declaration that associates an element name with a particular set of definitions
A prefix applied to URIs, URNs, and XML entities to prevent naming conflicts
A mechanism for qualifying element names to make them unique in an XML document For example <carriage> would mean one thing in a railway application and another in a parcel service If you ever combined these applications you could refer to them as <rail: carriage> and <parcel: carriage> "rail" and "parcel" are abbreviations representing XML specifications for each of these application areas
A part of the model in which the names may be defined and used Within a namespace, each name has a unique meaning See: name
Namespaces are typically established to distinguish between multiple interpretations of a single token or phrase One common example; a "nut" in the "food" namespace is something to eat, while in the "hardware" namespace something to fasten to a bolt (something you would not want to attempt with a "food: nut" and vice-versa) In XML, it can be thought of as a collection of names, identified by a URI reference [RFC2396], which are used in XML documents
ad boşluğu