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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] RE: relax ng public list?
A GUI is not just "elegant", but quite essential when capturing business logic from subject matter experts, in my experience. I routinely use Near & Far to build and edit DTD's in front of a group of SME's and developers. The SME's (patent examiners, highly educated and intelligent) have learned to express their processes within the logical realm of DTD's (without having to learn the syntax, which is even more important for Schema). When they ask me to do something that is not legal XML, we analyze the business requirement in order to find a way to express it in XML, or conclude that we need a Schema, or that it has to be done in the application software instead. This would be difficult if not impossible using a text editor. Still, we sometimes use an editor for the fine tuning (control) that is needed in some cases, but very rarely. That's left to the developers working on their own. Each tool to its purpose. Bruce B. Cox SA4XMLT USPTO/OCIO/AETS 703-306-2606 -----Original Message----- From: Bullard, Claude L (Len) [mailto:clbullar@i...] Sent: Tuesday, September 23, 2003 3:50 PM To: 'ari@c...'; xml-dev@l... Subject: RE: relax ng public list? I followed the link but didn't find the conspiracy theorist quote. Dare makes a case. They have a big framework with lots of applications using XML Schema and haven't digested all of it. A topic for a separate reply. Some people don't choose their tools. Some like the tools they have. I am habituated to opening the text editor to work with markup in any form until it proves too tedious to do so. W3C Schema isn't that tedious, but a good editor helps. By contrast, to do much that is large and efficient in X3D, an editor is a must-have for me but I know a few folks who managed VRML97 without one. So you are right about the complexity, but add to that, the opacity of the content regardless of the encoding. Real time 3D files are full of number triples, so human readable and human comprehensible aren't quite the same thing. len From: ari@c... [mailto:ari@c...] "Bullard, Claude L (Len)" <clbullar@i...> writes: > RNC certainly. A GUI user doesn't need a simplified syntax. A GUI vs. text, as with any different-level-of-abstraction level symbolic systems, is a tradeoff between ease and control. RELAX NG doesn't have enough complexity to make giving up control worth the marginal added ease for many people (no more than a speculation, again). I'm sure someone somewhere wrote a GUI to edit /etc/fstab, but I don't see a wide acceptance. > why shouldn't VS enable one > to select the schema language? Is it an issue of 'the W3C sanctioned > this one and we are good members', or 'this came first and we had > sweat equity in it, and you only need one', or 'sounds good, maybe > later'? Last time I speculated on that [1], you called me a conspiracy theorist :=) > A shot in the dark: RELAX NG is not perceived as an interesting > technology in the domain where many desktop and services vendors are > focused at the moment: web services. > > Would that perception be wrong? Again, I think people who do "WS the VS way" are not the kind of people who appreciate an elegant tool for a more civilized age.
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