[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Re: Re: Announcing a Preview of XString, an XML technology - X
Hello Oleg: Thanks for your comments and thoughts. Depending upon if there is a revision/follow-up to the preview I'll incorporate your feedback. I did update the web page about XString to include some information into the overview and discussion of XString. On 10/7/06, Oleg A. Paraschenko <olpa@x...> wrote: > Hello William, > > the paper looks interesting. I've looked through the paper. Not very > attentive, but reviewing experience have helped to see several issues. > > * I'm lost in the details of encoding the structual depth. > * I'm not sure that the size of the result does matter. > > The rest of the text is just random notes. > > /// > > First of all, welcome to the list of Paul: > > XML Alternatives > http://pault.com/xmlalternatives.html > > /// > > Reading the long text in a monospace font isn't fun. > > /// > > It made me laugh: > > ... Window INI file (btw, correct Window->Windows) > ... > HOME=/home/jdoe > > /// > > > Yet there is no existing technology to supply a solution to the problem > > addressed by XString, focusing on the problem of concise and compact XML > > representation. > > I disagree. See the Paul's list. > > /// > > It a bit nonsense when an XML paper uses the tag name "XML". Such names > are not allowed. > > /// > > > The three child nodes CHILD1, CHILD2, CHILD3 are ... > > Actually, the corresponding example has only CHILD1 and CHILD2. > > /// > > Encoding the depth level leads to the problem. You can't easily copy and > paste an XString subtree from one tree to another tree. It contradicts to > the statement in the abstract "... allows for easy manipulation and > procesing of XML source". > > /// > > You say that the size reduction is idealistically 50%. Compare it with the > naive method. I've taken real-life XML file of 1450210 bytes, compressed > it with gzip and get the archive of 374339 bytes, only 1/4 of the original > size. > > /// > > Applying L'Hopital rule for indeterminate ratios is an overkill. And to > apply it, you have to give a proof that you can use the rule. A simplier > way is to rewrite your expression as > > (1 + (1/n)) / (2 + (2/n)) > > The limit 1/2 is obvious. > > /// > > Byte/binary representation reminded me LZ compression. > > /// > > I think the following is a great idea: XML within XML. I recommend you to > pay more attention to it and make it one of the main selling points. > > How do you think, is it possible to write an XSLT to decode XString > representation? If yes, it would be wonderful alternative to > disable-output-encoding. > > /// > > Hope it helps. > > > -- > Oleg Parashchenko olpa@ http://xmlhack.ru/ XML news in Russian > http://uucode.com/blog/ Generative Programming, XML, TeX, Scheme >
[Date Prev] | [Thread Prev] | [Thread Next] | [Date Next] -- [Date Index] | [Thread Index] |
PURCHASE STYLUS STUDIO ONLINE TODAY!Purchasing Stylus Studio from our online shop is Easy, Secure and Value Priced! Download The World's Best XML IDE!Accelerate XML development with our award-winning XML IDE - Download a free trial today! Subscribe in XML format
|