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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Re: XSL Debate, Leventhal responds to Stephen Deach
At 01:49 AM 6/23/99 +1000, Rick Jelliffe wrote: >But removing a label does not remove semantics unless that label has >semantics (available through markup or hardcoded into the application.) >There is nothing more semantic about <name> than <font>. If you can figure out the meaning and do something with it, machine or otherwise, I'd be happy to argue that semantics are present. Perhaps not universal, perhaps not convenient enough, but they are indeed present, unless you're using a much more restrictive definition of semantics than I've ever encountered. >In XSL you can generate linking attributes which point to a controlled >vocabulary or which which point to the original document anyway. >So your argument here is not about XSL at all, but about one particular >use of XSL. Er... isn't generating formatting objects what _XSL_ is all about? (Yes, I'm aware that XSLT will let you generate other vocabularies.) >But XSL has a transformation language, so presumably it is transforming >from a more abstract kind of markup. Are you saying that is it always >wrong >to make data available in formatting markup? I'm saying that it is wrong to create a formatting tool that encourages developers to make data available _only_ in formatting markup, without providing the original semantics. This approach takes us away from the intelligent Web that the seemed to be the goal of the original XML development, and puts us in a hell perhaps worse than that already created by HTML's limited semantics. Imagine a table of developers who want to create agents. After years of battling HTML (and mostly losing), they're writing their resumes, leaving the field. While digging around for the latest buzzwords, they find the XML spec. Cheers go up, and the developers are ready to go out again and build new tools for collecting and using information. Then the XSL spec arrives, and rumors of 'semantic firewalls' come in from XSL-List. The agent designers sit down again and work on their resumes, hoping to finally get out of a field that the W3C encourages with their public statements and discourages with concrete proposals. The goodwill of information providers isn't strong enough encouragement to bank a career on. >That would be a strange >thing for the developer of FOP. I'm not the developer of FOP - that's James Tauber. It would indeed be strange for him to be saying such things. Simon St.Laurent XML: A Primer / Building XML Applications Inside XML DTDs: Scientific and Technical (July) Sharing Bandwidth / Cookies http://www.simonstl.com xml-dev: A list for W3C XML Developers. To post, mailto:xml-dev@i... Archived as: http://www.lists.ic.ac.uk/hypermail/xml-dev/ and on CD-ROM/ISBN 981-02-3594-1 To (un)subscribe, mailto:majordomo@i... the following message; (un)subscribe xml-dev To subscribe to the digests, mailto:majordomo@i... the following message; subscribe xml-dev-digest List coordinator, Henry Rzepa (mailto:rzepa@i...)
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