4

When creating XML I'm wondering why the CDATA blocks are uses rather than just escaping the data. Is there something allowed in a CDATA block that can't be escaped and placed in a regular tag?

<node><![CDATA[ ...something... ]]></node>

instead of

<node>...something...</node>

Naturally you would need to escape the data in either case:

function xmlspecialchars($text)
{
    return str_replace('&#039;', '&apos;', htmlspecialchars($text, ENT_QUOTES, 'utf-8'));
}

From the spec it seems that CDATA was just a posible solution when you don't the option to escape the data - yet you still trust it. For example, a RSS feed from your blog (that for some reason or another can't escape entities).

2 Answers 2

2

CDATA is just the standard way of keeping the original text as is, meaning that whatever application processes the XML shouldn't need to take any explicit action to unescape.

You get that typically with JavaScript embedded in XHTML, when you use reserved symbols:

<script type="text/javascript">
//<![CDATA[
    var test = "<This is a string with reserved characters>";

    if (1 > 0) {
        alert(test);
    }
//]]>
</script>

If you had if (1 &gt; 0) instead, it would have to unescape explicitly (which it doesn't). It's also much more readable like this.

3
  • Ah, I didn't think about using live elements like JS in an XML file. Then again, why aren't we using HTML5? XHTML doesn't even work on most sites when they turn the actual XHTML header on.
    – Xeoncross
    Aug 26, 2010 at 18:29
  • 2
    I know this is exaggeration but generally you could say that CDATA is a curiosity that is only needed if you debug XML or misuse XML ;-) (In this tongue-in-cheek context debugging would mean not reading or producing XML programmatically and misusing would mean for example handling XML as not XML. Both of these are happening every day.)
    – jasso
    Aug 26, 2010 at 19:51
  • @Xeoncross, I reckon most browsers support XHTML fairly well nowadays. The trouble is that on the server side, it's not just a matter of putting the XHTML header, the document has to be valid XHTML (and XML) too. One of the uses I've seen of CDATA with JavaScript is for template tools that process XML templates (which may contain some scripts) to produce some (X)HTML.
    – Bruno
    Aug 27, 2010 at 15:55
0

It's first and most of all readability feature. XML, and SGML before it were originally meant to be human readable - believe it or not :-))

Second, for a good parser it's a perf feature. The ]]> ending is guaranteed to be the actual block ending but apart from that it's a blob.

By the book parser should also keep the info/attrib on a node representation to track that it has explicit CDATA and never ever touch a single char in it.

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