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- From: Tim Bray <tbray@textuality.com>
- To: James Robertson <jamesr@steptwo.com.au>, "XML Developers' List" <xml-dev@ic.ac.uk>
- Date: Fri, 26 Mar 1999 09:52:11 -0800
At 09:20 AM 3/26/99 +1000, James Robertson wrote:
>Without the rigour of a DTD, we've got nothing.
This sentiment is not universally shared. While DTDs are extremely
useful and should be constructed as (a small) part of any serious
language-design effort, they are in some cases unnecessary (for
validation, full-text indexing, and lots of other things) and in
other cases insufficient - DTD validation never comes close
to real business-logic validation. I am near-schizophrenic these days,
running around telling people that yes, they should use DTDs, and
simultaneously warning them that there are situations where they
fail to be either necessary or sufficient; the kind of mystico-
religious attitude above does not help.
>How will future users make sense of the format without
>a DTD?
And what, pray tell, part of a DTD helps you "make sense" of a
format? -Tim
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