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Subject: RE: [dita] Issue 12055 Map referencing behaviors
- From: Michael Priestley <mpriestl@ca.ibm.com>
- To: "Ogden, Jeff" <jogden@ptc.com>
- Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2007 10:35:36 -0400
The specialized behaviors do not override
something that is required by the DITA standard. In fact, the reverse is
true: many of the current DITA standard specializations require processors
to override inherited behavior. As a simple example, look at the highlighting
domain. Bold is not the default output from a <ph> element.
If we're doing it within the spec when
we specialize, we can certainly expect others to do it when they add their
own specializations outside the spec.
Re your option 3 below: Can you
give me a scenario that would actually make use of this proposal? I'm having
a hard time understanding the need in the abstract. My initial reaction
is not positive, just because it adds a new architectural attribute that
needs to be set by specializers and managed/preserved/adjusted through
generalization and conref processes - so it will turn this relatively modest
proposal into a major proposal on the same order of magnitude as constraints
(or larger, given the recent reduction of that proposal).
Michael Priestley
Lead IBM DITA Architect
mpriestl@ca.ibm.com
http://dita.xml.org/blog/25
"Ogden, Jeff"
<jogden@ptc.com>
09/10/2007 03:57 PM
|
To
| Michael Priestley/Toronto/IBM@IBMCA
|
cc
| <dita@lists.oasis-open.org>, "Grosso,
Paul" <pgrosso@ptc.com>
|
Subject
| RE: [dita] Issue 12055 Map referencing
behaviors |
|
OK, but for those cases where
“the DITA Open Toolkit provides specialized behaviors for about a third
of the specialized elements in the DITA spec” do the specialized behaviors
provided override something that is required in the DITA standard or do
they override the processing for the base element as implemented by the
DITA Open Toolkit?
I see the “Specialization in
processing” section of the DITA specification as a collection of good
practices for writing XSLT or CSS stylesheets for use with DITA. I
don’t think it defines a standard method of sharing processing behaviors
unless the sharing is being done using the same processing system such
as the DITA Open Toolkit.
The DITA Open Toolkit, like all
output processing systems, implements portions of the DITA standard as
well as other things that have not been standardized and very often we
do not want to standardize. I guess a question we may need to answer
is, Are the behaviors being defined in Issue 12055 ones that we want to
include in the DITA Standard or are they ones that we want left open for
customization? And if we include them in the DITA Standard, how much
force do we want to give them? Are they requirements? Are they recommendations?
Are they examples?
Michael, do you see any harm in
providing additional information in the DTD or schema as I have been suggesting
(my option #3)?
-Jeff
From: Michael Priestley [mailto:mpriestl@ca.ibm.com]
Sent: Monday, September 10, 2007 3:17 PM
To: Ogden, Jeff
Cc: dita@lists.oasis-open.org; Grosso, Paul
Subject: RE: [dita] Issue 12055 Map referencing behaviors
Re:
>The reason I am uncomfortable with this is that it requires that someone
who wants to define a new specialization that requires exceptions provide
both the specialized elements and behavior. We have a standard way
to provide the specialized elements. We do not have a standard way to provide
the specialized behavior.
Actually we do - see the architectural spec section "Specialization
in processing".
>Without a standard way to provide the specialized behavior, someone
will need to reimplement the specialized behavior for different output
processing implementations. That will be extra work and seems likely to
result in different results as documents are moved from site to site and
implementation to implementation. We should avoid that if we can.
It's within the scope of normal DITA specialization to create a new specialized
element that has specialized processing. Some of the critics of specialization
have claimed that's the norm, which it's not, but it's not the exception
either. As one example, I believe the DITA Open Toolkit provides specialized
behaviors for about a third of the specialized elements in the DITA spec.
I believe most DITA users that are specializing DITA are also providing
specialized processing for at least some of their new elements.
Michael Priestley
Lead IBM DITA Architect
mpriestl@ca.ibm.com
http://dita.xml.org/blog/25
"Ogden, Jeff"
<jogden@ptc.com>
09/10/2007 03:05 PM
|
To
| Michael Priestley/Toronto/IBM@IBMCA,
"Grosso, Paul" <pgrosso@ptc.com>
|
cc
| <dita@lists.oasis-open.org>
|
Subject
| RE: [dita] Issue 12055 Map referencing
behaviors |
|
My own thought here is that we have three options:
1. Define standard
behavior that applies to all cases, no exceptions.
2. Say that
the behavior is implementation dependent, possibly giving an example of
a desired behavior that may be implemented.
3. Provide
a standard behavior and a way to designate exceptions to that standard
behavior.
For this particular case I don’t think #3 would be too hard and so that
would seem to be a good way to go.
I am uncomfortable with the option that is being proposed which I take
as defining standard behavior, but allowing exceptions. The reason
I am uncomfortable with this is that it requires that someone who wants
to define a new specialization that requires exceptions provide both the
specialized elements and behavior. We have a standard way to provide
the specialized elements. We do not have a standard way to provide the
specialized behavior. Without a standard way to provide the specialized
behavior, someone will need to reimplement the specialized behavior for
different output processing implementations. That will be extra work and
seems likely to result in different results as documents are moved from
site to site and implementation to implementation. We should avoid that
if we can.
I could live with option #1 (no exceptions). That puts the burden
on the author to use the “right” map elements when the behavior they
want isn’t the standard behavior.
I could live with option #2 (no standard). That is what we do for
most output processing today.
And as I said, I think option #3 is the best approach. I think all
we need is either:
a) a
new attribute similar to domain on the root element of a map that accepts
a space separated list of topicref specializations whose behavior
should not be overridden when they are referenced using a different element
from a higher level map, or
b) a
new attribute similar to class on topicref and topicref specializations
that indicates that this element’s behavior should not be overridden when
referenced from a higher level map.
In either case, like domain or class, the new attribute would usually appear
with its default value in a DTD or schema and not in the instance.
And, if we want to, rather than using a simple list or a single attribute
value, we might define a keyword or grouping syntax for the values so that
we could use the same attributes for other similar purposes in the future
should the need arise. Some possible approaches:
Simple list on the root element:
norefoverride=”element1 element2 … elementn”
Single valued attribute on the
topicref element or specialization: refoverride=”no”
Grouping syntax on the root element:
processing_exceptions=”norefoverride(element1
element2 … elementn) somenewoption(somenewvalues)”
Keyword list on any element:
processing_exceptions=”norefoverride somenewoption someothernewoption”
-Jeff
From: Michael Priestley [mailto:mpriestl@ca.ibm.com]
Sent: Monday, September 10, 2007 12:06 PM
To: Grosso, Paul
Cc: dita@lists.oasis-open.org
Subject: RE: [dita] Issue 12055 Map referencing behaviors
I think the wording needs some clarification - I don't think what you're
reacting to is actually Robert's intent.
Robert, I'm going to try to paraphrase here:
If someone specializes a map to create a new map-referencing element, they
can define specialized processing for that element if they want. Applications
that are not customized or extended to provide special handling for the
specialized element should instead treat the specialized element according
to its ancestry (ie, according to whatever behavior is provided in the
spec for that element).
I don't think Robert is saying more than the above, and that's true of
all specializations. He's just pointing out that the behavior defined in
the spec can be overridden by someone providing specialized elements and
behavior.
Why is it worth calling out at all then? I think because there are some
behaviors that we consider architectural (eg conref, the class attribute...)
that need to be consistent across specializations because they are designed
to provide interoperability across specializations; there are other behaviors
that are implementation-specific, in which the behaviors we provide are
defaults that can be overridden, rather than normative for the class of
all possible DITA document types. I think map-referencing behaviors fall
in the latter class, and that's what Robert is trying to say.
Robert, correct me if I'm wrong. Paul, does that re-interpretation address
your concerns?
Michael Priestley
Lead IBM DITA Architect
mpriestl@ca.ibm.com
http://dita.xml.org/blog/25
"Grosso, Paul"
<pgrosso@ptc.com>
09/10/2007 11:27 AM
|
To
| <dita@lists.oasis-open.org>
|
cc
|
|
Subject
| RE: [dita] Issue 12055 Map referencing
behaviors |
|
Robert,
If I understand correctly, you are suggesting that different
specializations can do different things based only on some
writeup in the standard.
Jeff and I have said that is the one choice we find unacceptable.
Either there needs to be some machine-readable way to determine
behavior (e.g., encode it in the DTD/XSDs), or all behavior must
be consistent. Having to hardwire potentially conflictly behavior
into an implementation for each specialization is not a good option.
Jeff and I will try to discuss this some more before tomorrow's
meeting, but I wanted to respond as soon as possible.
paul
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Robert D Anderson [mailto:robander@us.ibm.com]
> Sent: Monday, 2007 September 10 8:29
> To: dita@lists.oasis-open.org
> Subject: Re: [dita] Issue 12055 Map referencing behaviors
>
> Hi everybody,
>
> There is still no response to this one, so my plan for
> tomorrow's meeting
> is to keep to the original proposal. The specification should describe
> default behaviors for references from one map to another map,
> but allow
> that specializations may define alternate behaviors as appropriate.
> Compliant DITA processors should be expected to follow any alternate
> behaviors for OASIS approved elements, because those behaviors must
be
> described as part of the specification. However, there is no
> mechanism for
> processors to automatically determine the non-default
> behaviors for other
> specializations.
>
> I would be happy to have a way to define non-default behaviors for
map
> references. However, I am not sure how to come up with one
> that is simple
> enough to use, so it is not a part of this proposal.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Robert D Anderson
> IBM Authoring Tools Development
> Chief Architect, DITA Open Toolkit
> (507) 253-8787, T/L 553-8787 (Good Monday & Thursday)
>
> Robert D Anderson/Rochester/IBM@IBMUS wrote on 09/05/2007 04:28:03
PM:
>
> > In an attempt to draw out more responses on this one ...
> >
> > The issue under discussion is how to define differences in
> behaviors. To
> > make it easier, I will give a specific example.
> >
> > We have a chapter element defined in bookmap. When this
> points to a map,
> it
> > casts the referenced material in the role of a chapter, or
> a sequence of
> > chapters if there are multiple top-level elements. Attributes
and
> metadata
> > will cascade to the referenced 'chapters'.
> >
> > Within IBM we have another specialization, <topicsetref>.
> This is used to
> > point to commonly reused branches on a map. The behavior
> here differs -
> the
> > referenced material clearly is not cast into the role of a
> topicsetref.
> > Additionally, the topicsetref element defaults @type to
> 'topicset', which
> > indicates the type of the referenced target but should not
> be passed to
> the
> > targets. So, the map referencing behavior differs between
> chapter and
> > topicsetref.
> >
> > Because map is the most general DITA collection structure, it
should
> allow
> > appropriate processing based on the type of the collection
> and the type
> of
> > the collected content objects. That is, standard DITA map
> processing
> > behaviors are defaults appropriate to default DITA topics but
don't
> > preclude other processing behaviors.
> >
> > Options mentioned so far for defining this are:
> > 1) We specializers must expect to override programs to get anything
> > different from the default.
> > 2) We define overridable behaviors; programs may try to
> make it easier to
> > supply overrides to implement alternate behaviors
> > 3) Any behavior that differs from the default must be
> encoded in the DTD
> or
> > Schema (using a new, to-be-defined notation)
> > 4) OASIS approved elements that differ from the default
> must define the
> > difference in the specification. Default support for these
> differences
> > should be expected in processors, but simple support for
> differences in
> > user-created specializations is not guaranteed
> >
> > My own preference is for #1, because a) I think that
> differences from the
> > default should be expected, and b) I think defining those
> behaviors in
> the
> > DTD or Schema will be prohibitively complex. I would also
> be happy with
> #2,
> > although I do not think we can come up with a full list of
> overrides,
> just
> > like we cannot come up with a full list of specializations.
> If somebody
> can
> > suggest a DTD or Schema notation that is expandable and
> simple enough to
> > use for any case that might come up, I would readily shift
> my allegiance
> to
> > #3.
> >
> > Thanks -
> >
> >
> > Robert D Anderson
> > IBM Authoring Tools Development
> > Chief Architect, DITA Open Toolkit
> > (507) 253-8787, T/L 553-8787 (Good Monday & Thursday)
> >
> > Robert D Anderson/Rochester/IBM@IBMUS wrote on 08/30/2007
> 04:56:00 PM:
> >
> > >
> > > This is in reference to the proposal posted here:
> > >
> >
> http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/download.php/24910/IssueN
> umber12055.html
>
> >
> > >
> > > As noted at Tuesday's meeting, there has been some
> discussion off the
> > list
> > > about this item, primarily related to default behaviors.
> This proposal
> > > states that the described behaviors (such as that for cascading
> metadata)
> > > may change in a given specialization. For example, in the
general
> > topicref
> > > case and in most specializations, metadata specified within
the
> > <topicref>
> > > applies to the referenced content. This means that a
> processor could
> > treat
> > > specified metadata as if it was specified in the target
> topicref's.
> > >
> > > In some cases, the topicref element may be specialized to
provide
> meaning
> > > about the referencing context, rather than the target. In
> that case it
> > may
> > > be possible to set metadata that should not cascade to
> the targets, but
> > > should only be used to evaluate the reference itself.
> > >
> > > As I understand it, the open question is - how should
> such overrides of
> > the
> > > default behavior be defined? If they are not defined
> within the DTD or
> > > Schema, how can a tool anticipate the desired behavior?
> If they are
> > defined
> > > within the DTD or Schema, how can that be done, in a manner
that
> > > anticipates all of the overrides? If the changes are
> simply defined in
> > the
> > > element documentation, then tools will be unable to automatically
> > > understand how to treat the elements, and they will
> require overrides.
> > >
> > > Another, I believe less urgent, open question is about
> the terminology
> of
> > > cascading versus inheritance. It has been suggested that
> the behaviors
> > > described here, as well as in much of the map processing,
is more
> > properly
> > > described as cascading rather than inheriting. The
> proposal here uses
> the
> > > term "cascade". When this goes into the specification,
it
> will use the
> > same
> > > terminology as the spec, whether that ends up being
> cascade or inherit.
> > >
> > > Thanks -
> > >
> > > Robert D Anderson
> > > IBM Authoring Tools Development
> > > Chief Architect, DITA Open Toolkit
> > > (507) 253-8787, T/L 553-8787 (Good Monday & Thursday)
> > >
> >
>
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