Subject: RE: Can XSLT help with overlapping structures (was: XML slice des ign) From: Linda van den Brink <lvdbrink@xxxxxxx> Date: Mon, 15 May 2000 15:22:44 +0200 |
> Linda van den Brink writes: > > nesting rules. When working with TEI I encountered two > possible ways of > > solving the problem of overlapping structures: using empty > elements to mark > > one of the structures (used by Sydney), for example page > breaks, or using > > elements that you indicate as being interrelated and > together representing > > an element in one of the structures. (In TEI I used SPANs for this) > Sebastian writes: > Your example seems to assume a *non*-overlapping structure, whereas > Sydney had a page break in the middle of a <div>, unless I > misinterpret you. No, my example intended to show how to *use* a non-overlapping structure to represent an overlapping structure. Instead of having empty markers, I have page elements that nest inside divs and contain other elements (like p, note, list). Look again: <div type="chapter"> <page nr="1"><!-- start of first page --> <p>...</p> </page><!-- end of first page *element* to avoid mallformed nesting because of overlapping structure --> <div type="part"> <page nr="1"><!-- start of second page element that *still indicates the first physical page* --> <p>...</p> <note>...</note> <list><item>...</item></list> </page><!-- End of first page --> <snip/> > one has to ask *why* Sydney wants to do this splitting up. Of couse, Sydney could have a wrong reason for wanting to do this, but there can be valid cases where one wants to do this. Someone could be transcribing an edition of a (old) text and want to markup the page break structure as well as the chapter/paragraph structure. From one point of view the first of these structures could be significant, from another point of view the second structure could be, so you want to capture them both. Then when you want to output the transcribed source using the page break structure, showing the text page by page just like in the edition you're transcribing, you face this problem. A document can have two (or more) structures and it's difficult to represent this in SGML/XML. It's interesting to see if XSLT can deal with this. What's the best way to represent multiple structures in XML so that XSLT can work with those structures? Hey, I'm just interested in this stuff Linda XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
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