Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_S - Sgml Web Publishing

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 87    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Sgml Web Publishing:     more detail
  1. HTML, Java, CGI, VRML, SGML Web Publishing Unleashed by William Robert Stanek, Steven J. DeRose, et all 1996-03
  2. Content Management mit XML: Grundlagen und Anwendungen (Xpert.press) (German Edition)
  3. The SGML FAQ Book: Understanding the Foundation of HTML and XML (Electronic Publishing Series) by Steven J. DeRose, 1997-06-18
  4. DocBook Publishing [Book and CD-ROM] by Joe "Zonker" Brockmeier, Kara Pritchard, 2001-04
  5. Sgml at Work by Danny R. Vint, 1998-08
  6. The Concise SGML Companion by Neil Bradley, 1996-11-25
  7. Manual de Creacion de Paginas Web con CD-ROM (en Espanol/Spanish) (Manuales PC Users) (Spanish Edition) by Fernando Casale, Gustavo Katcheroff, et all 1999-03-06
  8. Web Design in a Nutshell by Jennifer Niederst, 2001-10-15
  9. OASIS (organization): Web Service, Democratic Process, SGML, CALS Table Model, Extensible Markup Language, UN/CEFACT, EbXML
  10. HTML Fundamentals by Curt Robbins, 1996-07-01
  11. DocBook: The Definitive Guide (O'Reilly XML) by Norman Walsh, Leonard Muellner, 1999-10-28

41. GM SGML, HTML, XML
Raggett, Dave Lam, Jenny Alexander, Ian ua HTML 4 web-publishing mit dem
http://www.urz.uni-heidelberg.de/Bibliothek/GM.html
GM SGML, HTML, XML

42. SGML And XML
Pages, (formerly The sgml/XML web Page). The and its parent, the Standard GeneralizedMarkup Language (sgml). XML in a MultiFormat publishing Environment, an
http://www.soltys.ca/techcomm/sgml.html
Internet Resources for Technical Communicators Internet Resources for Technical Communicators Articles
Bibliography

Book Reviews
... Top
SGML and XML
This list is for resources related to SGML (Standard Generalized Markup Language) and XML (Extensible Markup Language). There is quite a bit of overlap between the two, so the categorization of some sites is somewhat arbitrary.
SGML
  • Archive site for the comp.text.sgml newsgroup. Files are in the format yymm.tar.gz. Archives cover the years 1990 to 1996. The Debian SGML/XML HOWTO , "contains practical information about the use of SGML and XML on a Debian operating system". Very detailed but requires some familiarity with UNIX/Linux. The emphasis is on using SGML to write documenation. The DocBook DTD . DocBook is an SGML DTD maintained by the DocBook Technical Committee of OASIS. It is particularly well suited to books and papers about computer hardware and software. HyTime Application Development Guide , in HTML format NTSGML , "A brief tutorial on how to set up a free SGML editing and publishing system for Windows NT". It can be modified to run under Windows 95/98.

43. Computers & Internet / Web Development / Internet Commerce / Electronic Publishi
Read more. 9. See Picture See picture, web publishing Unleashed; HTML,CGI, sgml, VRML Java by Steven J. DeRose, William R. Stanek.
http://hallinternet.com/internet_commerce/2.shtml
Home Web Development Internet Commerce Electronic Publishing
Philip and Alex's Guide to Web Publishing
by Philip Greenspun Academic Press/Morgan Kaufmann
Paperback - 608 pages
(April 1999)
Click here for more info
Amazon.com
This isn't another cookie-recipe approach to planning a successful Web site. Philip and Alex's Guide to Web Publishing , by MIT veteran Philip Greenspun, is both broadly conceptual and deeply technical, and it assumes that the reader is willing to think seriously about the challenge of building a... Read more
Sam's Teach Yourself Web Publishing With Html 4 in 21 Days (Teach Yourself Series)

by Laura Lemay, Denise Tyler MacMillan Publishing Company
Hardcover - 1231 pages
Click here for more info
Amazon.com
Part of the Teach Yourself series, this book puts all of the foundational knowledge you need to build Web sites into one large volume, along with a solid explanation of the code and design principles involved. Experienced author Laura Lemay packs a tremendous amount of instruction into this massive... Read more Teach Yourself Web Publishing With Html 4 in a Week by Laura Lemay, Arman Danesh

44. Web Publishing
is a sgmlbased markup langauge (sgml= Standard Generalized the beginner, learningto author a web page may number of things to consider, but publishing on the
http://ei.cs.vt.edu/~cs1205/html/intro.html
H T M L PAGE (1 of 8)
Authoring for the WWW
What is HTML?
The HyperText Mark-up Language, (HTML) , is a coded text-formatting language. HTML H yper T ext M arkup L anguage) is used to publish Web pages. It is a SGML-based markup langauge ( SGML S tandard G ... anguage. See ISO 8879 ). It allows a Web-browser to determine how to display text and multimedia images, and how to interact between the reader and the WWW server providing the document. For the beginner, learning to author a web page may seem overwhelming. What tools do I use? Where do I get them? How do I write HTML code? Where do I publish it? True - the variables in accomplishing this task are many, and there are a great number of things to consider, but publishing on the WWW can be very simple with the right tools and resources. As easy as ABC...
  • Select an editor. You can choose to learn the hypertext markup language or design from a graphical editor. Which ever type you choose, take some time to learn the necessary features in creating a web page. Design and edit your page(s).

45. Compufield Software Programming Institute/School, India.
use in smaller establishments, XML was developed which contains all the salient featuresof sgml sans its web Page Designers. Creative publishing Professionals
http://compufield.com/multimedia_web_engineering_software.html
The Computer Institute Search For Our Courses Our Courses : Creative Courses I Internet Courses I Programming Courses I Hardware Courses I Network Engineering I MCSE CCNA I Courses for Kids l More Info : About Us I Franchise Schemes I Our Centers I Student's Reviews I Student Course Schedules I Student's Project Galleries l Web Promotion Miscellaneous : Your Feedback I Location of Compufield I Site Map I Student's Accomodation I Per Day Expenses I Top Downloads I Club Facilities I Jobs Assistance Student's Registration : Invoice I Letter of Acceptance I Registration Form I Tuition Fees Payment Facilities I Indian Consulates I Which Visa to Apply Programming
Courses VISUAL C++ VISUAL BASIC VBSCRIPT ASP ...
E-COMMERCE
WEB PUBLISHING,
DESIGNING, ENGINEERING

46. The Interent Is Not TV: Web Publishing
Kramer, Glen A., and Mayer, Niels P., Internet publishing via the World Wide web, Proceedings of Jerry, Content in Context The Future of sgml and HTML
http://som.csudh.edu/cis/lpress/wwwserv.htm
The Interent is not TV: Web Publishing
Communications of the ACM, Vol 38, No 3, March, 1995, pp 17-23
Server Platforms
WSK installation is guided by a series of Web pages. The first is a form asking for a few values like your email address and operating system. Next you are told to create a WSK subdirectory, the software is downloaded to that directory, and you run "sh" to unpack it. You are also given the option of downloading some utilities, like a utilization analysis program. In five minutes you have a home page that can be accessed by anyone with a Web browser anywhere in the world. This foreshadows electronic software distribution. The WSK is free, but it would be easy to integrate charging, registration, and upgrades. Support could also be provided on-line, with remote technicians accessing customer machines. EIT will market their software distribution system, and for a comprehensive discussion of current commercial developments in electronic software distribution, see [13]. There are versions of the WSK for most commercial unix platforms, and for Linux, an Intel-based, public domain unix named for its author, Linus Torvalds. There is an ambitious Linux developer community (for example, software to execute Windows applications is under way), and it is supported in active news groups. If you know unix, Linux on a PC would be an excellent platform for a low-cost Web server.

47. Internet Publishing, Vol. 2, No. 5: Table Of Contents
Many of these tools are intended for web publishing, but it is interesting to notejust how many of them will serve sgml's original purposeto create document
http://www.seyboldreports.com/SRIP/0205.html
Seybold Report on Internet Publishing
Volume 2, Number 5
January, 1998
Download the entire issue in PDF
BEHOLD THE NEWBORN: VENDORS HERALD THE ARRIVAL OF XML
LAST MONTH in Washington, the W3C announced the completion of XML as a specification ready for vote by the entire consortium. With adoption all but assured, vendors lined up to proclaim their readiness to support the new standard for marking up text for the Web. SGML has always been a cross-media publishing technology. Its limitation was that it proved too complex and costly for the mainstream market's taste. XML, or simplified SGML, maintains the important aspects of SGML and applies them to the Web in a way that has broader appeal. In doing so, the XML metalanguage will redefine Web publishing tools for the next few years. With that in mind, we present an in-depth look at the new XML tools that were announced last month at SGML/XML '97 and, to a lesser extent, Internet World. Many of these tools are intended for Web publishing, but it is interesting to note just how many of them will serve SGML's original purpose-to create document markup that works for all media, including print.
PUBLISHING MINGLES WITH E-BUSINESS AT FALL INTERNET WORLD
Electronic commerce dominated Meckler's December event, but there was an abundance of publishing tools for supporting online businesses. We look at authoring tools adapting to the latest browsers and continue our coverage of Web catalog systems.

48. May 1998 : SGML Databases &, Content Management For The Web
A complete application for managing structured data and publishing it on the webthus requires functions starting from a general RDBMS and an sgml/XMLaware
http://www.infoloom.com/gcaconfs/WEB/paris98/lecluse.HTM
Table of contents Indexes Style is not a 4-letter word
AIS Software
17 rue Rémy Dumoncel
clec@ais.berger-levrault.fr
Web: http://www.balise.com
Biographical notice:
Christophe Lécluse
Christophe Lécluse is manager of AIS Software. He has been working on SGML applications and systems for over eight years and specializes in SGML systems, object databases and languages. He was the originator of the Balise technology developed by AIS Software.
ABSTRACT:
The SGML community has been dicussing the concept of document management and SGML databases for several years. Coming from the Web and XML worlds, a new buzzword emerged in 1997: "Content Management for the Web". Although this concept today seems to embrace many different realities, there is clearly some overlap between Content Management for XML documents and Document Management as it was understood up to now.
This paper highlights some of the functional and technical aspects of the content management concept and aim to help you identify more clearly the underlying complementarity with document management as it has been defined and understood up until very recently.
Possible Definitions of Content Management
Defining Content Management today is clearly a challenge. The Web and the marketing brochures are full of tentative definitions that do not really draw a precise or globally consistent picture. The following sections present some of these common definitions.

49. May 1997 : Publishing To The Web Is More Than Converting Data Into HTML
As a result, the documents were created using sgml, desktop publishingtools, or word processors, and then converted into HTML for the web.
http://www.infoloom.com/gcaconfs/WEB/barcelona97/maziar35.HTM
SGML and the On-line Legislature Table of contents Indexes PDoS - Pinnacles DSSSL-O Stylesheet Maziarka Michael
Publishing to the Web is More than Converting Data into HTML
The Web was Designed to Be "Easy"
The World Wide Web, and subsequent use of Web technology for internal corporate use, gained mass appeal because of its simplistic approach to presenting data in an interactive manner to information seekers. In no time at all, everyone from middle school students to corporations was building Web sites. Those sites were created — more or less — as marketing vehicles for their creators. In a matter of hours, anyone could make their message available to the world. As a result of this rapid adoption of Web technology, corporate, commercial, and technical documentation publishers were presented with a new challenge: Publish on the Web! One would think that accomplishing this task would be as easy as "converting your data into HTML." Unfortunately, many additional challenges face the information publisher who must not only distribute information via the Web, but also using the more traditional vehicles of paper and CD.
Web Publishing Challenges
The challenges faced by the information publisher are many fold, primarily due to the different document access paradigm enabled by Web technology. For Web technology to be a useful vehicle for users to retrieve information, it must provide a way for the user to:

50. Publishing Formats
sgml web Page. TELECINE The Journal of New Media Authoring in the DigitalDomain. web Review (web publishing ideas). The Windows Help Format.
http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/isg/hyperjournal/format.htm
Publishing Formats
Adobe Acrobat Publishing Magazine Aretha , Frontier scripting language Adobe Home Page (download the free Acrobat Viewer program from here) ASC-HYP (Ascii-Hypertext-HTML publishing software) (Yale) FEED (example of linked hypertext articles) HTML 3 Specification The HTML Writers' Guild Homepage RTF to HTML (A utility for converting Rich Text Format documents into HTML) Sabercat HTML Links and Support Files Second Look Computing (Arachnid HTML Editor for the Macintosh) SGML Web Page TELECINE: The Journal of New Media Authoring in the Digital Domain Web Review (Web publishing ideas) The Windows Help Format Web-support (Discussion list) To see a demonstration of the main ejournal publishing formats click HERE Return to the HyperJournal Home Page

51. Xsl-editors@w3.org From April To June 1999: A Global Web Publis
In this paper, I outline my visions for a global web publishing framework and I isable to transform any wellformed XML document into a valid sgml document.
http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/xsl-editors/1999AprJun/0000.html
A Global Web Publishing Framework
From: Stefano Mazzocchi ( stefano@apache.org
Date: Tue, Apr 06 1999 stefano@apache.org cocoon@list.working-dogs.com ... stefano@apache.org

52. W3c-sgml-wg@w3.org From March 1997: Re: How To Put XML On The W
which are what differentiates sgml publishing from web publishing.What differentiates (welldesigned) sgml publishing from (current
http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/w3c-sgml-wg/1997Mar/0418.html
Re: How to put XML on the Web
From: Alan Karben ( karben@interactive.wsj.com
Date: Tue, Mar 25 1997 w3c-sgml-wg@w3.org karben@interactive.wsj.com

53. Openly Informatics, Inc.: XML Publishing
and Element Definition Document (EDD) for use with Adobe's Framemaker+sgml. boththe economics and practice of publishing journals on the web, said Dr
http://www.openly.com/efirst/
XML Publishing
MIJ-NSR
Internet Journal Management and Operation Openly Informatics, Inc. builds, hosts and operates Internet Journals. A well-developed example of our work, The MRS Internet Journal of Nitride Semiconductor Research , (MIJ-NSR) is accessible to the general public. Its aggressive use of automation makes MIJ-NSR one of the most innovative e-Journals in existence. In the course of building this journal Openly developed eFirst XML, which is now available for free licensing. Take advantage of Openly's expertise in XML and automated document conversion. To have us help your project, contact us at box@openly.com eFirst XML for Scholarly Articles Openly Informatics, Inc. announced on May 24, 1999 that it was releasing several components of its eFirst XML technology for free licensing. eFirst XML is an application of the World-Wide Web Consortium's (W3C) eXtensible Markup Language (XML) for scholarly and scientific journal articles. eFirst XML has been used in the production of the two most recent volumes of the MRS Internet Journal of Nitride Semiconductor Research , a pure-internet journal published by the Materials Research Society with the assistance of Openly Informatics, Inc.

54. Walmart.com - HTML, SGML, VRML, XML
HTML, sgml, VRML, XML. tags, syntax, and extension for building web pages; coverstext, animation, and multimedia; and traces the web publishing process from
http://www.walmart.com/catalog/product_listing.gsp?cat=20209&path=0:3944:3951:18

55. FarsiNet's Web Publishing Tools, Training Programs, Services And
FarsiNet's web publishing Training; Introduction to Netbased Documentation - web webDevelopers - Virtual Library. HTML documents are sgml documents with generic
http://www.farsinet.com/webpub/
FarsiNet's Web Publishing Tools, Training Programs, Services and Online Resources
Web Services
HTML
HyperText Markup Language (HTML) is a simple markup system used to create hypertext documents that are portable from one platform to another. HTML documents are SGML documents with generic semantics that are appropriate for representing information from a wide range of applications. HTML markup can represent hypertext news, mail, documentation, and hypermedia; menus of options; database query results; simple structured documents with in-lined graphics; and hypertext views of existing bodies of information. HTML has been in use by the World-Wide Web (WWW) global information initiative since 1990. The HTML 3.0 specification provides a number of new features, and is broadly backwards compatible with HTML 2.0. It is defined as an application of International Standard ISO ISO8879:1986 Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML). This specificiation will be proposed as the Internet Media Type (RFC 1590) and MIME Content Type (RFC 1521) called "text/html; version=3.0".

56. An SGML-Based Web Server
repositories is vastly simplified; Lays the foundation for future deploymentof objectoriented authoring/publishing systems. Some sgml-based web servers.
http://www5conf.inria.fr/fich_html/slides/dday/sgml/all.htm
An SGML-Based Web Server
Jon Bosak, SunSoft
What is SGML?
  • Standard Generalized Markup Language: the international standard for structured document interchange, ISO 8879 (1986)
  • Developed out of a search for a universal typesetting language begun in the late 1960s
  • Descriptive, not procedural - the procedures are left to formatting/presentation systems
  • Not a single markup language, but a metalanguage for the specification of an unlimited number of markup languages, each optimized for a particular category of documents
  • The SGML description of a markup language is called a Document Type Definition (DTD)
Major industry DTDs (markup languages)
ATA 2100 aircraft industry CALS military, aerospace CMC pharmaceuticals PCIS semiconductors DocBook computer software IBMIDDoc IBM software SAE J2008 automobile manufacturing TMC T2008 truck manufacturing TIM telecommunications EDGAR Securities and Exchange Commission ISO 12083 journal, book, and magazine publishing ICADD publishing for the print-disabled TEI academic and scholarly publishing UTF news media HTML World Wide Web HTML is just one of many standardized special-purpose SGML markup languages.

57. FrameMaker & The Graphics Connection
Computer Graphics Metafile) format, which is also the standard for sgml systems. XMLand web publishing SVG SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics) is the XMLstandard
http://www.square1.nl/TGC-SITE/framemaker_.htm
Home Products Developers Formats ... Adobe® FrameMaker® delivers a powerful, enterprise-class authoring and publishing solution. With its WYSIWYG, template-based environment, FrameMaker enables scalable, single-source authoring. Create short documents or multivolume books for print or for publishing as Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF), HTML, SGML, XML, and more. New! Batch process EPS graphics to SVG for the Web - ps2vector completes the SVG support offered by FrameMaker 7.0, enabling you to repurpose your existing EPS / Frame graphics for the Web in this powerful new XML-standard Web vector graphics format. See below for details. Editable technical illustrations from any source application
Since 1995, FrameMaker users around the world have relied on ps2vector from The Graphics Connection to bring technical graphics into their documents as scalable and editable MIF drawings. Engineers and illustrators can deliver their graphics to technical documentation simply by printing them to PostScript (or saving as EPS) from their source application - be it a CAD package, a scientific plotting tool like MATLAB ®, a diagramming application like Microsoft ® Visio ® or a legacy system like Interleaf ®. While FrameMaker can also place EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) files in documents, there are several reasons why tech writers choose ps2vector and the MIF format instead:

58. DocBookPublishingTools - DocBook Wiki
having the material in literal form in the sgml file the DocBookXslStylesheets toolchaininclude XSLT engines, FO engines, and webbased publishing systems
http://www.docbook.org/wiki/moin.cgi/DocBookPublishingTools
DocBookPublishingTools UserPreferences
DocBook Wiki FrontPage RecentChanges TitleIndex WordIndex ... Help Tools for transforming DocBook documents into other formats. Note that NormanWalsh has created a DocBookPublishingModelDiagram to illustrate the XML publishing model for DocBook . A smaller DocBookXsltPublishingModelDiagram illustrates XML publishing with XSLT only.
DSSSL publishing tools
Tools in the DocBookDssslStylesheets toolchain include:
  • Jade/Openjade , DSSSL engine (for generating HTML output and other formats) JadeTex , TeX macros for formatting Jade/Openjade output into PDF, Postscript, other formats
Note that Jade/Openjade and Jadetex can be used with XML content as well as SGML content. Note: When using DocBook with Open Jade, a significant performance optimization comes if you ensure that material that is to be presented in literal form is drawn in as file inclusions rather than having the material in literal form in the SGML file. Large sections of literallayout material can process stunningly slowly.
XSL publishing tools
Tools in the DocBookXslStylesheets toolchain include XSLT engines, FO engines, and Web-based publishing systems.

59. Extensible Markup Language (XML) Activity Statement
An executive overview of W3C's current and historical work on the Extensible Markup Language (XML).Category Computers Data Formats Markup Languages XML...... simple, very flexible text format derived from sgml (ISO 8879 the challenges of largescaleelectronic publishing, XML is of a wide variety of data on the web.
http://www.w3.org/XML/Activity
Extensible Markup Language (XML)
Activity Statement
Activity statements provide an executive overview of W3C's work in this area. The XML home page points to highlights and has links to the individual Working Group pages. Work on XML is being managed as part of W3C's Architecture domain.
  • Introduction Role of the W3C Current Situation What the Future Holds ... Contact
  • Introduction
    The Extensible Markup Language ( XML ) is a simple, very flexible text format derived from SGML ( ISO 8879 ). Originally designed to meet the challenges of large-scale electronic publishing, XML is also playing an increasingly important role in the exchange of a wide variety of data on the Web. Some XML benefits in brief:
    • Enables internationalized media-independent electronic publishing Saves business money by enabling the use of inexpensive off-the-shelf tools to process data Saves training and development costs by having a single format for a wide range of uses Increases reliability, because user agents can automate more processing of documents they receive Provides the underpinnings of the Semantic Web, enabling a whole new level of interoperability and information interchange

    60. Scholarly Publishing On The World Wide Web
    HTML (HyperText Markup Language), a simple application of sgmllike markup simplicityhas contributed to its popularity and made web publishing more accessible
    http://www.oclc.org/research/publications/arr/1994/part1/scholwww.htm
    Scholarly Publishing on the World Wide Web
    Project Manager: Stuart L. Weibel, Consulting Research Scientist Abstract The explosive growth of the World Wide Web (WWW) is due in part to the ease with which information can be made available to Web users. The simplicity of HTML and HTTP servers lowers the barriers to network publishing. The high-quality rendering of HTML in WWW browsers such as Mosaic raises the aesthetic appeal of information and makes it more useful by virtue of enhanced readability. But the simplicity that makes WWW technology so appealing also makes it difficult to represent the complex markup and typography necessary for scholarly publishing. The need for extensive character sets and more effective interface facilities for inter- and intra-document navigation stretches the limits of the current standards that underlie the Web and its clients. In addition, the stateless nature of WWW client-server interactions presents certain challenges to the effective implementation of search and retrieval functionality so important to effective document retrieval systems. OCLC distributes several scholarly journals under its Electronic Journals Online service, acting, in effect, as an electronic printer for scholarly publishers. As part of this effort, OCLC has prototyped a WWW-accessible version of these journals.

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 3     41-60 of 87    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter