- Source: XPointer
XPointer is a system for addressing components of XML-based Internet media. It is divided among four specifications: a "framework" that forms the basis for identifying XML fragments, a positional element addressing scheme, a scheme for namespaces, and a scheme for XPath-based addressing. XPointer Framework is a W3C recommendation since March 2003.
The XPointer language is designed to address structural aspects of XML, including text content and other information objects created as a result of parsing the document. Thus, it could be used to point to a section of a document highlighted by a user through a mouse drag action.
During development, and until 2016, XPointer was covered by a royalty-free technology patent held by Sun Microsystems.
Positional element addressing
The element() scheme introduces positional addressing of child elements. This is similar to a simple XPath address, but subsequent steps can only be numbers representing the position of a descendant relative to its branch on the tree.
For instance, given the following fragment:
results as the following examples:
xpointer(id("foo")) => foobar
xpointer(/foobar/1) => bar
xpointer(//bom) => bom (a=1), bom (a=2)
element(/1/2/1) => bom (a=1) (/1 descend into first element (foobar),
/2 descend into second child element (baz),
/1 select first child element (bom))
See also
URI fragment
HTML
HyTime
Text Encoding Initiative Guidelines
XML
References
External links
XPointer Framework
Namespacing
Path based addressing
XPointer patent terms and conditions
Open source implementation (CognitiveWeb)
GPL License .NET implementation (XInclude.NET)
Method and system for implementing hypertext scroll attributes on Google Patents, expired 2016-02-01