|
ETD
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
| SGML Introduction (Standard Generalised Mark-up Language - part 1-3.)
SGML - Your Multi-Platform Publishing and Information Management Solution Did you ever wish that instead of maintaining a document in a bunch of different formats you could keep your documents in just one format that every computer and every application could understand? Did you ever wish that large documents were more like databases and less like an endless string of words? Well, you're not alone. What is SGML and what can it do? SGML is a platform-neutral standard for creating documents and information archives - it's a series of rules that everyone can follow in order to make their documents publishable in different media (print, CD-ROM, the Web) and to make their documents readable with different kinds of computers. SGML is also a structure for storing information which eases info-management and manipulation: it supports very powerful searching, and allows large information repositories to be repurposed, broken down, and rearranged intelligently into individual documents. What are some uses of SGML? Large Product Catalogues A large catalogue stored in SGML is easily published in print, on the Web, and on CD-ROM from a single SGML archive. Individual product sheets can also be extracted from the archive automatically, and printed as individual promotion sheets. Manual and Documentation Archives The aerospace industry is using SGML to store large archives of documentation about aircraft maintenance. When a new manual needs to be produced on a specific topic such as avionics or on a specific series of airplanes, a search and conversion utility can find and format the appropriate information. |
||||||||||||||
|
Back |
||||||||||||||
Next page |
||||||||||||||