Resource Directory Description Language: Difference between revisions

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m Scott moved page RDDL to Resource Directory Description Language over redirect: Use full name, not abbreviation.
"including" does not imply any limitation - using lawyers' redundancies makes articles very dull
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In [[computing]], '''Resource Directory Description Language''' ('''RDDL''') is an extension of [[XHTML]] Basic 1.0. An RDDL document, called a Resource Directory, provides a package of information about some target. The targets which RDDL was designed to describe are [[XML namespace]]s. The specification for RDDL has no official standing and has not been considered nor approved by any organization (e.g., W3C).
 
RDDL is designed to allow both human readers and software robots to find any sort of resource associated with a particular namespace. Instead of putting one thing at the end of a namespace [[Uniform Resource Identifier|URI]], RDDL puts a document there that lists all the machine-processable documents that might be available, including, but not limited to:
 
* [[Document Type Definition]]s (DTD)