XBL

For other uses, see XBL (disambiguation).

XBL (XML Binding Language) is an XML-based markup language used to declare the behavior and look of XUL-widgets and XML elements. Development of the XBL specification was abandoned by the W3C in 2012.

XBL was developed by the Mozilla project for use in the Mozilla Application Suite; the language is not currently described by any formal standard and is thus proprietary to Mozilla, with the only implementation being the Gecko layout engine. XBL 2.0 is the latest version of XBL.

XBL basics

In XUL one defines the user interface layout of an application, and then by applying "styles" one can customize the look of various elements. The drawback is that XUL provides no means to change an element's function. For example, one might want to change how the pieces of a scroll bar work. This is where XBL comes in.

An XBL file contains "bindings", each of which describes the behavior of a XUL-widget or XML element. For example, a binding might be attached to a scroll bar. The behavior describes the properties and methods of the scroll bar and also describes the XUL elements defining the scroll bar.

The root element of an XBL file is the <bindings> element, which contains one or more <binding> elements. Each <binding> element declares one binding, which can be attached to any XUL element. It may also possess an id attribute. A binding is assigned to an element by setting the CSS property -moz-binding to the URL of the binding's file. For example:

scrollbar {
  -moz-binding: url('somefile.xml#binding1');
}

wherein binding1 is the id of the binding.

History and future

XBL was initially developed and implemented as part of the Mozilla platform, alongside the XUL language, so XBL is available in most Mozilla-based products: Firefox, Thunderbird, SeaMonkey etc. There used to be an XBL 1.0 specification document on Mozilla.org, which was submitted to W3C as a Technical Note, but the actual implementation never matched the specification.

The newest version of the specification, called XBL 2.0, was developed to address the problems of XBL 1.0 and to allow for implementation with a broader range of Web browsers. The Candidate Recommendation of the specification was released by W3C in March, 2007.[1] The specification was not implemented by other browser vendors. Work on the XBL 2.0 specification was abandoned by the W3C Working Group in 2012.[2]

Relationship with other specifications

The sXBL specification aims to do for SVG documents what XBL has done for XUL documents. SVG is an XML language proposed by the W3C supporting graphics, animations, embedded media, events and scripted behavior.

XBL 2.0 superseded the sXBL draft , as stated in the W3C Web Application Format Working Group site. Also the chapters of the sXBL specification are a subset of those of XBL 2.0.

The Shadow DOM specification acknowledges XBL as a strong influence.

See also

References

  1. W3C news archive: 2007

Documentation/Browser implementations

Cross-Browser implementations

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/25/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.