4.1. W3C tutorial

发布时间 :2023-12-20 23:00:03 UTC      

The W3C allows everyone to share resources on the Internet.

W3C (World Wide Web Consortium, World wide Web Consortium), also known as the W3C Council, is the main international standards organization of the World wide Web.

Start learning W3C!

4.1.1. W3C tutorial list

W3C brief introduction
This section: what is the W3C organization, how it works, and how the network is standardized.
W3C process
This section: W3C standardization process.
W3C HTML
This section: a brief introduction to the W3C HTML.
W3C XHTML
This section summarizes the W3C XHTML activities.
W3C XML
This section summarizes the W3C XML activities.
W3C CSS
This section summarizes the W3C CSS activities.
W3C XSL
This section summarizes W3C’s XSL activities.
W3C XML Schema
This section summarizes the W3C XML Schema activities.
W3C XPath
This section summarizes the W3C XPath activities.
W3C XQuery
This section summarizes the W3C XQuery activities.
W3C DOM
This section summarizes the W3C DOM activities.
W3C SOAP
This section summarizes the W3C SOAP activities.
W3C WSDL
This section summarizes the W3C RDF activities.
W3C RDF
This chapter summarizes the RDF activities at the W3C.
W3C Other
This section summarizes other W3C activities.

Principles, Technologies, and Methods of Geographic Information Systems  102

In recent years, Geographic Information Systems (GIS) have undergone rapid development in both theoretical and practical dimensions. GIS has been widely applied for modeling and decision-making support across various fields such as urban management, regional planning, and environmental remediation, establishing geographic information as a vital component of the information era. The introduction of the “Digital Earth” concept has further accelerated the advancement of GIS, which serves as its technical foundation. Concurrently, scholars have been dedicated to theoretical research in areas like spatial cognition, spatial data uncertainty, and the formalization of spatial relationships. This reflects the dual nature of GIS as both an applied technology and an academic discipline, with the two aspects forming a mutually reinforcing cycle of progress.