Comparison of document markup languages
Appearance
The following tables compare general and technical information for a number of document markup languages. Please see the individual markup languages' articles for further information.
General information
Basic general information about the markup languages: creator, version, etc.
Characteristics
Some characteristics of the markup languages.
Notes
- ^ An Emacs mode and a Mozilla extension are available.
- ^ http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/ref/rst/introduction.html#history
- ^ Many markup languages have purposely avoided presentational markups. For markup languages based on SGML and XML, CSS is used as a presentation layer.
- ^ Presentational content is supported through SVG and MathML markup. In select XML editors, the images can be viewed as rendered.
- ^ Presentational markup is deprecated as of XHTML 1.0 and no longer allowed as of XHTML 1.1
- ^ Presentational markup is deprecated as of HTML 4.0
- ^ MathML comes in two mark-up syntaxes: a semantic and a presentational.
- ^ uses Content MathML, OpenMath or other formats for formulae
- ^ Exact presentation of symbols can be specified in OMDoc; these specifications are used when transforming OMDoc to a presentational format.
- ^ http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/ref/rst/introduction.html#goals
- ^ uses CSS
See also
- List of document markup languages
- Comparison of Office Open XML and OpenDocument
- Comparison of OpenXPS and PDF
- Comparison of e-book formats
- Comparison of data serialization formats