Skip to main content

Marking Up Information Into XML Structure And Seeing The FINISHED Product




                The Light Bulb Is FINALLY Turned On!

My mentor has me working on a project called "Artes Latinae".
I have been marking up the information contained in images he has given me (using the XML markup language) so that a program he has can read my XML file and recreate the original image from my XML markup.


Today he showed me the end result of what all of that markup creates.   I am a very visual person, so when I see the end result - it ties everything together for me.

It was AWESOME!  He is turning a language book into an interactive online teaching course.  For people who learn best by interactive methods, this is going to be a valuable course.

He showed me where the <sound></sound> tags and <response></response> tags will look like when they are done AND the importance of using the ans="" attributes in all of the <response></response> tags.   They are important because when you see the finished product, those <response></response>  tags that have the ans="" attribute will be a blank space where the user needs to type the answer.  The ans="" attribute will then check the user's answer to the answer that is in the <response></response> tags.  If the answer is correct, the user will be told it is a correct answer.  If the answer is incorrect, the user will have a chance to try again. 

Pretty cool stuff!



Follow me as I learn to build my website bit by bit!    IronTreeDev.com



Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

XPATH and XPATH Expressions In XMLLINT

XPATH And XPATH Expressions Earlier, I told you about xmllint and xmllint for html files .  Let's say you just want to parse the <span> tags within your html file or just your <span lang="el"> tags? Enter:  Xpath. Xpath is yet another option available within the xmllint language. Remember, an Xpath is used to navigate through elements and attributes in xml and html documents.  Xpath uses Xpath Expressions to select nodes or node sets within a document. Example 1 .  Looking for all of the <span> tags within an html document. xmllint -- html -- xpath " // span" StedmanLesson10.html xmllint = This tells the command line that we are going to be using the xmllint language. space = because we always have space in between commands -- = Remember, these are the two hyphen-minus characters that we need to tell the command line that we are going to use an xmllint option. html = This is the xmllint option we want to

Back To The Basics

Click photo above to see photo clearly  It's Been A LOOONG Minute since I have coded!!   Even so, I decided to give JavaScript another try.  I always seem to do good and then when I get to this one area, I always seem to hit a brick wall.  Well....nothing like getting back up and trying again right?   I decided to try Rithm School's online JavaScript Fundamentals FREE course .  I have never joined their school but their free courses tend to explain things in a way my brain understands it.  💁 To let you know how much I have forgotten in the coding world, I couldn't even remember how to write the basic commands for an HTML document! Yesterday I started the fundamentals free course and I am so glad that I did.  Because of time, I only made it through the JavaScript History and Setup chapter, but that chapter was enough to get my memory flowing again!   It started to feel familiar and I quickly remembered why I enjoyed coding so much.  Yesterday and this morning, I just erased

SCP: Secure Copy Protocol

SCP = Secure Copy Protocol.  What is it and why is it important?   SCP provides a secure way to transfer files from one computer to another. For the project that I'm working on, I needed to SCP (send a copy) the XML files, as well as the image files, from my computer to my EC2 Instance (my web server).  Once done,  my teacher was be able to view my work via my website. Here are the steps to do this: 1.  Open two command windows (the program for my computer is called Terminal). 2.  Let's say the file I want to send is called "SallysFirstDate.xml" and it is located in the "tomy" folder.  Here is where that file lives: /Documents/path/tomy/SallysFirstDate.xml I need to first issue the command to "change directory"(cd) through each folder until I reach the folder that my file is located in.   It would look like this: cd /Documents THEN I need to "cd" again into the "path" folder: cd path THEN I need to "c