ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 34 Document Description and Processing Languages ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC34 N 55 DATE: 1999-03-15 REPLACES DOC TYPE: National Body Contribution TITLE: Additional US National Body Comments on SC 34 N 7, ISO/IEC WD 13240, Revised Text of ISMID SOURCE: US National Body PROJECT: 1.34.43 STATUS: For review and discussion at the 20-22 April 1999 SC 34/WG 3 Meeting. ACTION ID: ACT DUE DATE: DISTRIBUTION: P and L Members SC Chairman WG Conveners and Secretariats MEDIUM: E DISKETTE NO.: NO. OF PAGES: 3 ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 34, American National Standards Institute, 11 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036, Tel: +1 212 642 4976, Fax: +1 212 840 2298, Email: mtopping@ansi.org
Additional U.S. Comments on SC34/N007
1. Previous US comments recommended an XML-conformant version of the
ISMID architecture and noted in particular the implications for the
start- and end-tag omission parameters of element type declarations.
Note that the XML version is subject to other restrictions. One
example is the use of SGML comments as separators in declarations
other than comment declarations. While we had recommended following
the style developed for ISO/IEC 10744:1997 in element type and
attribute definition list declarations, this style calls for comments
between the parameters of these declarations. Since such comments
are not permitted in XML, the XML version of the architecture must
place comments describing the element types and attributes outside of
the declarations.
2. In the name of the Standard and the language, change "Modifiable"
to "Multimedia". We make this request because the term "modifiable" is
not generally used in conjunction with interactive documents, while
such documents are almost invariably used in multimedia applications.
3. ISO 8879 does not define (or even use) the term "valid SGML
document". The correct phrase is "conforming SGML document".
4. Definitions that come from other standards should identify their
source (e.g. "document" is from 8879).
5. Add (or revise as indicated) the following definitions. Change the
text as needed to use these terms consistently (e.g., distinguish
appropriately between "interactive document" and "interactive
presentation").
interactive presentation
A form of presentation of a document in which the order of navigation
through the document content is modified during presentation in
response to conditions.
NOTE: The modifications are typically in response to external stimuli,
such as user interactions, which is why these presentations are termed
"interactive". However, the dynamic modification can also be in
response to presentation algorithms contained in the document or
within the system controlling the presentation.
NOTE xx. A document need not be an interactive document in order for
it to be the subject of an interactive presentation.
interactive document
A document that is not intended for static presentation. It typically
contains algorithms for its own interactive presentation.
static presentation
A form of presentation of a document in which the order of navigation
through the document content is essentially the same as the order in
which the content appears in the computer representation of the
document.
NOTE xx. In a static presentation, any dynamic modification is
typically limited to the navigational functionality offered by a
printed volume, such as page-turning and cross-reference following.
static document
A document that is intended for static presentation.