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Looking for Word Count, Character Count, or Line Count? "Not everything that counts can be counted, and not everything that can be counted counts."
Albert Einstein
But AnyCount counts precisely what you need!
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Define What To Count Settings in AnyCount determine which objects should or should not be included in count results. These may include numbers, footers, headers, text in shapes, and so on. After files and folders have been selected and added, click Settings button to adjust common and format specific count settings
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Select Count Units Before starting counting process, ensure that you select right count units. These can be characters with spaces, characters without spaces, words, lines, pages or your own count units. Currently selected count unit is displayed in the bottom right corner of the AnyCount window. You can change count unit with the help of drop-down list.

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Obtain Precise Results After you click the Count! button AnyCount Text Count Engineruns and produces word counts, line counts, page or character counts for the documents you have selected. After the text count is completed, results are displayed in the table

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About Extensible Markup Language (XML)

The Extensible Markup Language (XML) is a W3C-recommended general-purpose markup language for creating special-purpose markup languages, capable of describing many different kinds of data. It is a simplified subset of SGML. Its primary purpose is to facilitate the sharing of data across different systems, particularly systems connected via the Internet. Languages based on XML (for example, Geography Markup Language (GML), RDF/XML, RSS, MathML, Physical Markup Language (PML), XHTML, SVG, MusicXML and cXML) are defined in a formal way, allowing programs to modify and validate documents in these languages without prior knowledge of their form.

Features of XML:

XML provides a text-based means to describe and apply a tree-based structure to information. At its base level, all information manifests as text, interspersed with markup that indicates the information’s separation into a hierarchy of character data, container-like elements, and attributes of those elements. In this respect, it is similar to the LISP programming language’s S-expressions, which describe tree structures wherein each node may have its own property list.

XML makes no prohibitions on how it is used. Although XML is fundamentally text-based, software quickly emerged to abstract it into other, richer formats, largely through the use of datatype-oriented schemas and object-oriented programming paradigms (in which the document is manipulated as an object). Such software might only treat XML as serialized text when it needs to transmit data over a network, and some software doesn’t even do that much. Such uses have led to “binary XML”, the relaxed restrictions of XML 1.1, and other proposals that run counter to XML’s original spirit and thus garner an amount of criticism.

Links:

World Wide Web Consortium XML homepage
The XML 1.0 specification
The XML 1.1 specification

 

Word Counts, Character Counts, and Line Counts for XML Files

AnyCount produces word counts and counts in other volume units (characters with spaces, characters without spaces, lines, pages, custom units) for single or multiple files in .XML format:

Word count results window for .XML file formats:

AnyCount - XML Word Count

When AnyCount completes the word count or other units count of .XML you have a wide variety of possibilities for viewing and saving the count result:

  • view count results on the screen;
  • copy results to clipboard;
  • sort count results in columns;
  • print count results;
  • export count results to .TXT format;
  • export count results to Comma-Separated Text/Tab-Separated Text (.CSV Format);
  • export count results to .HTML format;
  • export count results to MS Word format;
  • export count results to MS Excel format;
  • export count results to .RTF format.