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Understanding RSS - Part Nine - Rounding Out The Multi-Media - The CDATA Command
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Ted Gross

Ted Gross was born and raised in New York City and in 1978, moved to Israel, and currently resides in Jerusalem.

He began his writing career in University as the op-ed editor of the University paper and wrote a series of eight editorials during that year. While in Israel, he wrote two children's books. "The Letter & The Crown"; was published in Israel, while the second, and more successful, was published in the United States by United Synagogue entitled, "Of Rabbit's Wool & Camel's Hair". While teaching comparative religion, he also had articles on polemics and religion published in Midstream Magazine.

However, by the time the children's books were published his family was growing, and he began work and was active in high tech from 1985 until 2001. There he functioned as a CTO — Chief Technological Officer — in three different companies, managing to take two companies from start-up phase to a buyout and a successful IPO respectively.

After having taken the last company to a successful IPO, six children and a peaceful divorce, it was time to leave high-tech and try and develop some ideas in writing. At that point, Israel embarked on "Operation Defensive Shield", and since Ted is a reserve battlefield medic, he ended up in Jenin, and the battles that took place there became front-page news all over the world. "Three Weeks In Jenin" was written soon after, though unfortunately the contract was cancelled once the United States entered into its current war with Iraq. However, an independent movie producer, did do a documentary on Ted's experiences as a medic in Jenin.

He currently is working on the "Chronicles of the Children of Heaven" (a fantasy work), on another non-fiction book entitled "Last Times" and on a cooking book entitled "Help! I Have A Fire In My Kitchen", (as well as short stories and poetry from time to time). To make ends meet, Ted owns a real-estate investment firm in Jerusalem and Virgin Earth Article Submissions.

Examples of Ted's work can be found on his web site.

Usually one can find Ted either putting out fires in his kitchen, drinking coffee in a cafe musing about the great "what-ifs" of life, assistant coaching little league baseball, dealing with one of his six children, having a fight with his sister, or walking the byways of Jerusalem with Rainbow, his golden retriever, pondering the silence of the heavens.

 
By Ted Gross
Published on 06/24/2006
 

This is the final part that deals with the various possibilites within the RSS file. Here we discuss the oft-used CDATA command which allows for HTML commands to be added to the RSS Item description and opens the possibilities for a full text/image/audio/visual file.


Understanding RSS - Part Nine - Rounding Out The Multi-Media - The CDATA Command

The Controversial CDATA programming construct has caused somewhat of a love-hate relationship among RSS programmers. What is CDATA? Well to put it in very easy terms, it allows us to place within the description sub-element of Item, HTML commands and language. In other words it extends the description by allowing us to create links, references and the like within what is purely a text element created to describe the item. Remember that within the Item element, the sub-element of description will look like this.

<description>Here is where I describe the item in my RSS feed</description>

Let us say I want to extend this piece and I wanted to get a Bold command

<b> </b> or italics <i> </i>

command or something else within it. Or perhaps I would want to place a break in the lines

<br/>

dividing it up? Or maybe I want to get more sophisticated? Let me give you an example. Remember Randy Pandy and his Perfumery at randypandy.com? Well now not only does his wife Sandy want to describe the HeavenScent Skunk Perfume but she wants a picture of the bottle with the description. So, hold on, you say. Easy as pie. Use the enclosure command. Well right and not right. Sure you can put a picture of the perfume bottle in the enclosure command, but it will NOT appear WITH the description. It will appear alone and then the user will have to read the description. So while this is GREAT for audio and video a plain visual that I want next to a description kind of gets left alone if I just put in an enclosure. So we have the description, and for the sake of all I will repeat it here.

<description>Heaven Scent Perfume the Smell your lover will die for. Created especially by Skunk Perfumes it is their newest and best selling perfume on the market today. Purchase a beautifully shaped skunk bottle with this incredible perfume and get a whopping 50% off! And if you purchase over $100 we will throw in Free overnight delivery as well!</description>

Okay now Sandy wants a picture to go right into that description and when the user sees the text in their aggregator they will also get a visual. Thus the CDATA command. First lets look at it in action and then we will explain.

<description>[CDATA[<img border="0" src="http://www.randypandy.com/perfumes/heaven.JPG" width="138" height="180"/><p> Heaven Scent Perfume the Smell your lover will die for. Created especially by Skunk Perfumes it is their newest and best selling perfume on the market today. Purchase a beautifully shaped skunk bottle with this incredible perfume and get a whopping 50% off! And if you purchase over $100 we will throw in Free overnight delivery as well! </p><p>randypandy.com - All Perfumes You Can Ever desire</p> <br clear="all"/>]]</description>

Notice first what we did? First we set the tag description. Then within it immediately we tell the file "Hey get ready for some good old HTML", and thus we add the

[CDATA[

Next we want our picture of the perfume. So for those of you who know HTML this is simple. We give it the image information.

<img border="0" src="http://www.randypandy.com/perfumes/heaven.JPG" width="138" height="180"/> After that we continue with our description. Get in a few line breaks with either the or <br/> </br/> constructs. Then finally before the end we close it off with ]] tag.

You can get fairly sophisticated with CDATA. The thing is many programmers do NOT like it, as it allows too many rooms for mistakes, and it is a throwback to old HTML. The purity of the XML is kind of compromised here. But it serves a purpose and allows us to get a picture with the words, which is incredibly important. Many, many RSS feeds use it, and it is a very useful tool to get the "picture" across to the user. You can combine it as well with enclosure, to get an audio out, a description, and say a picture of the Album. In other words a full media experience of text + picture + audio. Well that is it. Our next article will put it all together and give you a look at the final well formed XML file which will act as our template for rss.xml. It will lay it all out for you with a couple of items, so you can grab it and use it for your RSS feed. This Article was Part Nine of the series - RSS Mania Understanding RSS. All of this series is available at Ezine Articles (ezinearticles.com)

  1. RSS Mania Addiction - An Introduction to RSS and the Terminology
  2. Outline of How to Create an RSS Feed
  3. The Template File
  4. The Basic Elements of the Channel Element
  5. How The RSS Feed Works & Some Programming Constructs
  6. RSS Channel Sub-Elements Specifically Image & How To Use It
  7. Understanding RSS - Part Seven - The Elements Within the "Item" Element
  8. Understanding RSS - Part Eight - Podcasting, VideoCasting & The Magic of the Enclosure Sub-Element

Copyright © 2005 Ted W. Gross. All rights reserved. (You may publish this article in its entirety with the following author's information with live links only.)

Ted W. Gross owns Virgin Earth http://www.virginisrael.com, a real estate brokerage firm in Jerusalem, Israel. Virgin Earth represents residential and commercial real estate all over Israel. Virgin Earth also maintains an RSS Feed on its current properties and also operates Virgin Earth - Israel Tourism & Information Portal on the same site. Ted Gross is also a published author and maintains a web site for his works. This can be found at: http://www.virginisrael.com/twg/iw.html. Virgin Earth Blog can be found at: http://virginearth.blogspot.com/