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Christian,
You noted "the rules are published in english and implementors are expected to
stick to them".
Hmmmm. How can they do that? FIXML has the same problem. EDI tried this for 20
years and it does not work - because people cannot execute the MS-Word
document, or Excel spreadsheet against their business transactions to see if
they are conformant. And keeping the documents up to date kept EDI'rs busy for
years and years.
Now we have the ability to express those business rules directly in XML script
templates - and have them shared - but more importantly versionable.
On the 'one big schema' I would suggest you look at what FIXML and OAGi have
learned (again same thing EDI learned) - eg it makes the cost of implementation
way high when you have to wade thru all the permutations with all your trading
partners.
Your train-wreck is just leaving the station!
This is what OASIS CAM template are designed to solve.
Cheers, DW.
Quoting Christian Nentwich <christian@systemwire.com>:
> There is a lack of dissent here :)
>
> I'm not sure I buy the "there is no single schema" argument. There
> are reasons not considered here that you may want a single schema for:
>
> - As a system contract. Swallow the pain, at least the schema is
> a stable definition.
>
> - As a surrogate for a legal contract (I'm involved with the FpML
> standard for financial derivatives. Their schema is partly derived
> from legal contract templates and having multiple versions around,
> or letting counterparties mess with it is not something that would
> fly).
>
> While we're on FpML, it's one of the few XML standards that publishes
> validation business rules. The rules are published in English and
> implementors are expected to stick to them. See
>
> http://www.idealliance.org/papers/dx_xml03/html/abstract/06-02-05.html
>
> for my XML 2003 paper/talk on the subject and http://www.fpml.org for
> the rules, published with every release.
>
> regards,
>
> Christian Nentwich
>
> -------------------------------------
> Christian Nentwich
> Technical Director, Syste/\/\/ire
>
> Semantic validation? Let's go...
> http://www.systemwire.com
> -------------------------------------
>
> > Hi Folks,
>
> >>From reading yesterday's messages, I feel like the real issues are coming
> > out. And the real issues, I perceive, are in the various fallacies with
> > validation. Below I provide a start at listing the fallacies. Your help
> in
> > elaborating these is needed.
>
> > Fallacies of Validation
>
> > 1. Fallacy of "THE Schema"
>
> > 2. Fallacy of Schema Locality
>
> > 3. Fallacy of Requisite Validation
>
> > Let's examine each of these fallacies.
>
> > 1. Fallacy of "THE Schema"
>
> > This fallacy was identified by Michael Kay last week:
>
> >> ... there's no harm in using XML Schema to check data
> >> against the business rules, so long as you realize this
> >> is *an* XML Schema, not *the* XML Schema. We need to stop
> >> thinking that there can only be one schema.
>
> > Yesterday Len Bullard made a similar statement:
>
> >> ... most fundamental errors are ... to consider only a single schema.
>
> > and at another point Len states:
>
> >> ... fall into the trap of thinking of THE schema and not
> >> recognizing the system as a declarative ecosystem of schemas
> >> and schema components.
>
> > Both Michael and Len are stating that in a system there should be numerous
> > schemas. This is a big mindshift for me. I admit being trapped into
> > thinking that there should be a single schema.
>
> > It would be very useful if we could have a simple example that shows how
> > several schemas might be employed, rather than a single schema. Could
> > someone provide an example?
>
> > Len, I like the term you used, "declarative ecosystem". Could you
> elaborate
> > upon what this means?
>
> > 2. Fallacy of Schema Locality
>
> > Yesterday Len also identified this fallacy:
>
> >> ... most fundamental errors are to consider schemas only at the external
> > system junctions ...
>
> > Len notes that many people think that validation should occur at a certain
> > place in the system, namely, at the outermost edges of the system. (Len,
> I
> > assume this to mean the user-interface?) Len argues that validation can
> > rightfully be done at many locations in a system. Len, perhaps some more
> > words on this fallacy would be in order?
>
> > 3. Fallacy of Requisite Validation
>
> > Yesterday Michael Kay made a very compelling statement with regards to
> > whether validation should be done at all in certain situations. Michael
> was
> > responding to the example of an online service validating a user's
> address.
> > Here's what Michael said about the online service's insistence on
> validating
> > the user's address:
>
> >> The strategy (validating the user's address) assumes that
> >> you know better than your customers what constitutes a
> >> valid address. Let's face it, you don't, and you never
> >> will. A much better strategy is to let them (the user) express
> >> their address in their own terms. After all, that's what they
> >> do in old-fashioned paper correspondence, and it seems
> >> to work quite well.
>
> > Michael argues very effectively that in this situation it makes no sense
> to
> > do any validation at all!
>
> > I have not yet read all of yesterday's postings, so I may have missed some
> > other fallacies. If you know of any fallacies that I missed, would you
> > please send them along?
>
> > Also, if you have comments on the fallacies identified above, please send
> > them along. Note: examples are much needed!
>
> > /Roger
>
>
>
>
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