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| June 2, 2009 04:17 PM EDT | Reads: |
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I usually don't top post, but this is a general comment -- not responding to anyone in particular. It depends who/what is using the XML. Is an XSL document declarative or passive? What is XSL to an something like oXygen XML editor when a user is editing that XSL? What is an XSL doc that you transform it to another XSL doc? What is this document: <div> <youtube ref="some-youtube-id"/> </div> which, when transformed according to some set of rules, becomes javascript to trigger a video to display on a page or ask you to get at least a certain version of Flash and displays a GIF. Is an Atom/RSS document declarative or passive? -Rob On Jun 2, 2009, at 7:51 PM, B Tommie Usdin wrote: > At 7:01 PM -0400 6/2/09, Costello, Roger L. wrote: >> I want to identify those characteristics that make an XML document >> declarative and those characteristics that make an XML document >> passive. > > This, I think, could be interesting and useful. The more we know > about our documents, the better. It seems likely that this > differences, like other differences, may define categories of > documents that behave, or should be managed, differently. > > At 7:01 PM -0400 6/2/09, Costello, Roger L. wrote: >> Assertion: declarativity is a quality that is good and desirable >> and should be maximized. > > I would rephrase: > > Assertion: there are circumstances in which highly declarative > documents are appropriate and valuable. > > Assertion: there are circumstances in which algorithmic documents > are appropriate and valuable. > >> >> Assertion: passivity is a quality that is good and desirable and >> should be maximized. > > Assertion: there are circumstances in which passive documents are > valuable, and in those circumstances documents should be engineered > for maximum passivity. > > Assertion: there are circumstances in which active documents are > valuable, and in those circumstances documents should be engineered > for maximum activity. > >> >> Assertion: by measuring its declarativity and passivity we can >> assess the goodness of an XML document. > > Assertion: by locating a document (or collection of documents, or > perhaps a document type) on both the active/passive and declarative/ > algorithmic scales we probably describe some important features of > the documents. > >> Assertion: the goodness of an XML document is a function of its >> declarativity and passivity. > > Assertion: the goodness of an XML document is a function of the > appropriateness of its design to its intended use(s). Levels of > declarativity and passivity may be important clues to a document's > fitness to purpose. > > -- Tommie
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Published June 2, 2009 Reads 285
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