A newline (aka line break or end-of-line, EOL) is special character or character sequence that marks the end of a line of text. The exact codes used vary across operating systems:
LF: Unix
CR: Mac OS up to version 9
CR+LF: Windows, DOS
You can use 

for line feed (LF) or 
for carriage return (CR), and an XML parser will replace it with the respective character when handing off the parsed text to an application. These can be added manually, as you show in your example, but are particularly convenient when needing to add newlines programmatically within a string:
- Common programming languages:
- XSLT:
LF
: <xsl:text>
</xsl:text>
CR
: <xsl:text>
</xsl:text>
Or, if you want to see it in the XML immediately, simply put it in literally:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<item>
<text>Address</text>
<data>
Sample
Text 123
</data>
</item>
Newline still not showing up?
Keep in mind that how an application interprets text, including newlines, is up to it. If you find that your newlines are being ignored, it might be that the application automatically runs together text separated by newlines.
HTML browsers, for example, will ignore newlines (and will normalize space within text such that multiple spaces are consolidated). To break lines in HTML,
- use
<br/>
; or
- wrap block in an element such as a
div
or p
which by default causes a line break after the enclosed text, or in an element such as pre
which by default typically will preserve whitespace and line breaks; or
- use CSS styling such as
white-space
to control newline rendering.
XML application not cooperating?
If an XML application isn't respecting your newlines, and working within the application's processing model isn't helping, another possible recourse is to use CDATA
to tell the XML parser not to parse the text containing
the newline.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<item>
<text>Address</text>
<data>
<![CDATA[Sample
Text 123]]>
</data>
</item>
or, if HTML markup is recognized downstream:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<item>
<text>Address</text>
<data>
<![CDATA[Sample <br/>
Text 123]]>
</data>
</item>
Whether this helps will depend upon application-defined semantics of one or more stages in the pipeline of XML processing that the XML passes through.
Bottom line
A newline (aka line break or end-of-line, EOL) can be added much like any character in XML, but be mindful of
- differing OS conventions
- differing XML application semantics