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- From: "Simon St.Laurent" <SimonStL@classic.msn.com>
- To: "Paul Prescod" <papresco@technologist.com>, xml-dev@ic.ac.uk
- Date: Sat, 29 Nov 97 06:24:02 UT
>I'm not sure what this means. Building a grove is not the job of a
>parser. Typically the parser outputs the events and some other process
>builds the grove from the information. The only way a parser could be
>not written to create groves is if the parser did not output sufficient
>information to build a grove conforming to a particular grove plan.
One key piece of the XML puzzle that has consistently driven me crazy is the
lack of explanation for which part of an application is supposed to handle
which part of processing. A simple application might well combine the parser
and the application, while others will provide separate services, perhaps
allowing users to choose any (reasonably generic) parser they like, a styling
engine, a set of linking rules, and perhaps a set of tools for viewing and
manipulating data, perhaps even editing it.
I'd really like to see something on the order of the OSI model Rick mentioned
that describes these possibilities and the relevant standards. To those of us
new to the glories of flow objects and groves, which part handles what is
something of a mystery. Is there a road map out there, or is it time to build
one?
Simon St.Laurent
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