Compare Extensible Markup Language and Tom's Obvious Minimal Language formats — understand the key differences and when to use each
Extensible Markup Language
XML (Extensible Markup Language) is a flexible, self-describing markup language standardized by the W3C. XML uses custom tags to define data structure and is the foundation for many other formats (DOCX, SVG, XHTML, RSS, SOAP). It supports schemas (XSD), namespaces, XSLT transformations, and XPath queries. XML is widely used in enterprise systems, document formats, configuration files, and data exchange protocols. While JSON has largely replaced XML for web APIs, XML remains essential in publishing (DocBook, DITA), financial services (FIX, XBRL), and government data standards.
Tom's Obvious Minimal Language
Tom's Obvious Minimal Language (.toml) is a data file format.
| Feature | XML | TOML |
|---|---|---|
| Full Name | Extensible Markup Language | Tom's Obvious Minimal Language |
| File Extension | .xml | .toml |
| Category | data | data |
| Free to Convert | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Browser Support | ✓ All Browsers | ✓ All Browsers |
| Convert to Each Other | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
或将文件拖放到此处
最大文件大小:2GB