XBEL

Today, XBEL is a topic that arouses great interest and generates debate in different areas of society. Whether due to its historical relevance, its impact on popular culture or its influence on everyday life, XBEL has become a topic of global relevance. From scientific research to social trends, XBEL has taken on a central role in public discourse, capturing the attention of people of all ages and backgrounds. In this article, we will analyze different aspects related to XBEL, exploring its meaning, its evolution over time and its presence today.

The XML Bookmark Exchange Language (XBEL), is an open XML standard for sharing Internet URIs, also known as bookmarks (or favorites in Internet Explorer).

An example of XBEL use is the XBELicious application, which stores Del.icio.us bookmarks in XBEL format. The Galeon, Konqueror, Arora and Midori web browsers use XBEL as the format for storing user bookmarks. The Floccus synchronization client can store XBEL on WebDAV servers. The SiteBar bookmark server can import and export bookmarks in XBEL format.

XBEL was created by the Python XML Special Interest Group "to create an interesting, fun project which was both useful and would demonstrate the Python XML processing software which was being developed at the time".

It is also used by Nautilus and gedit of the GNOME desktop environment.

Example

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE xbel>
<xbel version="1.0">
    <folder folded="no">
        <title>Wikimedia resources</title>
        <folder folded="yes">
            <title>Wikimedia websites</title>
            <bookmark href="https://en.wikipedia.org/">
                <title>Wikipedia</title>
            </bookmark>
            <bookmark href="https://en.wikibooks.org/">
                <title>Wikibooks</title>
            </bookmark>
        </folder>
    </folder>
</xbel>

See also

References

  1. ^ "The XML Bookmark Exchange Language Resource Page".

External links