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Re: Visualization of XML Data trees

  • From: Stephen Cameron <steve.cameron.62@gmail.com>
  • To: William Velasquez <wvelasquez@visiontecnologica.com>, "xml-dev@l..." <xml-dev@l...>
  • Date: Wed, 10 Sep 2014 08:45:20 +1000

Re:  Visualization of XML Data trees
Other visual approaches here:

http://www.michelepasin.org/blog/2013/06/21/messing-around-wih-d3-js-and-hierarchical-data/

On Wed, Sep 10, 2014 at 1:53 AM, William Velasquez <wvelasquez@visiontecnologica.com> wrote:
Thanks Liam for the book reference.

The web site http://disciplineoforganizing.org/ has some sample chapters and surely I'll buy it in order to learn how to solve my problem.


- Bill

________________________________________
De: Liam R E Quin <liam@w3.org>
Enviado: martes, 09 de septiembre de 2014 10:42 a. m.
Para: William Velasquez
Cc: Gareth Oakes; xml-dev@lists.xml.org
Asunto: Re: Visualization of XML Data trees

On Tue, 9 Sep 2014 15:34:04 +0000 William Velasquez <wvelasquez@visiontecnologica.com> wrote:

[...]

> I have a particular use case: Navigating the collection of schemas in the UBL specification (is a long hierarchy of processes, documents, agreegates, entities, etc), but maybe is extensible to other use cases, like navigating documents, extense product catalogs, organization charts, or something similar.
>
>
> The problem with the Tree View (in desktop or Web enviroments) is that it requires too many user clicks to get where he wants to go. The more deep the hierarchy, the more clicks the user has to perform.

Maybe a faceted search would be useful? E.g. a tag cloud, or a group of tag clouds if that makes more sense.

Trees are always arbitrary, you can organize information in multiple hierarchies.

This may be the subject of Bob Glushko's book, The Discipline of Organizing, but not having seen a copy I am not certain - it might also be about woodworking to construct tidier cabinets from the title :-) which goes back to the problem with abstract labels, and why a tag cloud or divisions into more concrete categories can work much better.

--
Liam Quin - XML Activity Lead, W3C, http://www.w3.org/People/Quin/
Pictures from old books: http://fromoldbooks.org/
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