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W3C DOM Activities
The Document Object Model (DOM) is a platform and language neutral
Application Programming Interface (API) that allows programs to access and
update the content, structure, and style of a
document.
Free Tutorials
To learn more about the DOM, study our DHTML tutorial
and our DOM tutorial.
DOM Level 0
The DOM Level 0 is not a W3C specification. It is just a definition of the functionality
equivalent to that found in Netscape Navigator 3.0 and Microsoft Internet
Explorer 3.0.
W3C's DOM Level 1 builds on this functionality.
DOM Level 1
DOM Level 1 concentrates on HTML and XML document models. It contains
functionality for document navigation and manipulation.
DOM Level 1 was released as a W3C Recommendation 1. October 1998.
A Working
Draft for a Second Edition (SE) was published 29. September. 2000.
DOM Level 2
DOM Level 2 adds a style sheet object model to DOM Level 1, and defines
functionality for manipulating the style information attached to a document.
DOM Level 2
also defines an event model and provides support for XML namespaces.
The DOM Level 2 specification was released as W3C Recommendations 13.
November
2000:
DOM Level 2 Core
DOM Level 2 Core specifies an API to access and update the content and structure of documents.
The API also contains interfaces dedicated to XML.
DOM Level 2 HTML
DOM Level 2 HTML specifies an API to manipulate
the structure and contents of an HTML document. (This part of the specification
is still a working draft)
DOM Level 2 Views
DOM Level 2 Views specifies an API to dynamically access and update the view
of a document. A view is some alternate representation of, or a presentation of,
a document.
DOM Level 2 Style
DOM Level 2 Style specifies an API to dynamically access and update the
content style sheets.
DOM Level 2 Events
DOM Level 2 Events specifies an API to access document events.
DOM Level 2 Traversal-Range
DOM Level 2 Traversal-Range specifies an API to dynamically traverse and
identify a range of content in a document.
DOM Level 3
DOM Level 3 specifies content models (DTD and Schemas) and document
validation. It also specifies document loading and saving, document views,
document formatting, and key events. DOM Level
3 builds on DOM Core Level 2.
DOM Level 3 Requirements
The DOM Requirements document has been updated for Level 3 requirements and
was released as a Working Draft 12. April 2000.
The following DOM Level 3 Working Drafts were released 1. September 2000:
DOM Level 3 Core
DOM Level 3 Core specifies an API to
access and update the content, structure and style of documents.
DOM Level 3 Events
The DOM Level 3 Events API expands the functionality of the Level 2 Event API by adding new interfaces and new event sets.
DOM Level 3 Load and Save
DOM Level 3 Content Model specifies an API for document loading and
saving, content models (DTD and Schemas) and document validation support.
DOM Level 3 Views and Formatting
DOM Level 3 Views specifies an API to dynamically access and update the view
of a document. A view is some alternate representation of, or a presentation of,
a document.
W3C DOM Specifications and Timeline
W3C Reference:
W3C DOM Home Page
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