[XSL-LIST Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] RE: Terminology
Wow! Well I have two additional definitions for schema from the Dictionary of Object Terminology (Firesmith/Eykholt) that may also help 'fill in' the definition in a more object-oriented way: 1. the set of all types whose instances may be stored in a single objectbase. (in document terms, the definition of all the types of information objects that may occur in documents of a particular type) 2. any collection of object types and other schemas that constitute some form of operational system. Every schema identifies a list of object types and some schemas impose structure on this list. (this one is pertinent because in the case of DTDs or Schemas they do ordain order as well as rules on type, how objects are composed and related) I will also say, Robert, that your original use of the term 'information design' was absolutely correct. If you read literature (which I do) about this area of interest, the term is generally agreed upon by professionals in the area to apply to BOTH the "page design layout" issue that the web folks are interested in and to the more general and conceptual issue of how information designed (from concept to writing to presentation) to meet a given audience and purpose. Sara [snipped from Robert DuCharme 7/12/00] > Unlike a lot of these terms that we throw around, there is no > solid formal > computer science definition of the term "schema." At least, > none that I > could find, and I looked in a wide variety of textbooks and > basic reference > works (C.J. Date, etc.). > [snip] > The term "data structures" is more commonly used, but > discussions of it > focus on the data structures available in various computer > languages and how > to use them, not when. I used to like the term "information > design" until I > found out that it's used to describe visual layout by the > page layout types > who now design web pages. "Information architecture" is also > popular, but > popular enough to become a buzzword and therefore often > applied a bit too > widely. The design of a given system's "object model" is > probably closest to > what you want; this will take you in the direction of the > object-oriented > literature, and document designers (i.e. people analyzing information > components and their relationships, not the "information > designers" picking > fonts and colors) can learn a lot from that world. > > Bob DuCharme www.snee.com/bob <bob@ > snee.com> "The elements be kind to thee, and make thy > spirits all of comfort!" Anthony and Cleopatra, III ii > > > XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list > XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
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