PRODUCT SHEET

XML Merge Product Sheet

XML Merge is a complete toolkit for reliably merging 3 or more XML documents or datasets into a single file. Download the product sheet to understand how the solution helps to identify all the meaningful diffs between your XML files.

Working within the structure of your files to identify real change.

Rather than comparing line-by-line, XML Merge identifies and matches up all the XML elements across your files, so it has a meaningful and dependable basis for comparing and merging your content.

XML Merge creates an output file which is based closely on your original ancestor file, with all the unresolved changes laid-out using precise, descriptive XML markup. This output file is passed through an XSLT pipeline, so you can apply transformations to generate the exact output that you require for internal workflow, wider distribution or in your product code.

Download this product sheet to:

  • Understand how XML Merge works within your processes and projects.
  • Learn how XML Merge processes content
  • Review important benefits the solution provides.
  • Recognise why XML Merge is chosen over other XML Merging tools.

XML Merge Product Sheet

Product Sheet

The intelligent change management solution, XML Merge allows users to accurately identify and then merge the changes of various versions of an XML file into a single file.

Open Product Sheet

XML Merge provides an intelligent, XML-aware, merge tool. By integrating all the changes into a single XML file, with the commonalities and differences clearly identified, a wide variety of output results can be achieved.

Related Media

Branch and merge may be a software developer’s dream, but using this technique with structured documents can turn into a nightmare. The merge process is so often a manual one: cut and paste and get frustrated. Can structured XML merge turn the nightmare back into a dream?

XML Compare is a complete toolkit for reliable XML diff comparison. Download the product sheet to understand how the solution helps to identify all the meaningful diffs between any two XML files.

It’s common to have data in two files that we need to merge together, two different people or two different processes have made changes. Does it matter who or what has made this change? This question might help to decide whether you need a 2-way or 3-way merge.