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This seems to be old news, and paywalled.
Edit: gee, thanks MSN. The article i'd read was about the license plate.
Morgan Null, in black, with her parents and brother, all Nulls. lol
Not that rare of a name apparently...
I've seen XML parsers that will convert element content from strings to native types by default. So "0" becomes an int, "true" becomes a boolean, and "null" becomes an actual null. I had to take extra steps to keep everything as a string unless explicitly told not to.
JSON does not have this problem, BTW.
I don't think anyone actually chooses XML. There's no reason to use it over JSON unless you need to.
XML can validate itself and there's the self-documenting WSDL; so while it has more overhead and an ugly syntax it can make for a more stable and earlier to understand API for your API's consumers.
This point is always stated about XML as if it were the most important part of choosing XML.
But jsonschema exists. It has the same capability.
json is fine as a serialization format for things that need to be text, but it's not great as something that gets edited by hand.
not that I enjoy xml, but writing long strings in json is even worse. xml I can write multiline strings as a first class entity.
I can add a comment to an xml document, json I have to write something hacky like "//": "my comment"
and hope whatever is consuming it doesn't care.
there's just as many problems with json parsers, since most but not all of them treat numbers as js numbers, which are basically floats. you can't rely on an arbitrary consumer having support to parse ints above a certain size so you just have to make everything a string and hope.
json allows duplicate keys, but they get overridden by the last occurrence. you can't round trip json without losing something. you can't rely on just seeing a key value in json text and that being correct since there could be another later. doesn't come up often but it's there.
The entirety of the banking world uses XML very heavily, as it's part of the SWIFT standards.
I didn't say that it's not used. I say that you shouldn't if you have the option.
If the entire X world uses Y technology. You have no choice other than using Y technology.
Taking the issue at face value, I wonder what Johnny Null's workaround would be for his (or their) name?
N'ull? Nul-l? \Null? Null? JohnnyN ull?
Definitely not N'ull, that would trigger a SQL error when it can't interpret the ull after the string delimiter.
--Null
Wait til they meet my friend Little Bobby Tables.
Who the hell writes if 'null'
? If it's a thing, what language would interpret a string like that?
It's fine in PHP, so that catches most server backends.
Ruby as well, it even raises a warning about the string where a bool should be!
Python handles it just fine, as well.
Rust doesn't allow it, depending on the backend framework and server software this might give issues.
So depending on how this is handled a C# or Rust backend might cause the name not to be stored, but then I'd expect nothing to be stored... :/
Fucking JavaScript
Srsly?