Ian,

could you point to any particularly suitable xml files?

eg http://www.honte.eu/playGo/games/Shusai-GoSeigen-19340119.xml

xslt transforms client-side into an SVG board with pieces, that are played and captured using css,
but could as easily be an html list of moves.

regards

Jonathan

On 25 Feb 2010, at 13:00, Ian Forrester wrote:

To my mind I can't think of any example of the BBC publishing or generating SVG, but I know quite a few of our content management systems could generate SVG tomorrow if there was the desire, take up and need.

Cheers
Secret[] Private[] Public[x]

Ian Forrester
Senior Backstage Producer

BBC R&D North Lab,
1st Floor Office, OB Base,
New Broadcasting House, Oxford Road,
Manchester, M60 1SJ



From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected] ] On Behalf Of Jonathan Chetwynd
Sent: 25 February 2010 12:36
To: [email protected]
Subject: [backstage] s...@bbc?

s...@bbc?

Has the BBC published anything at all in SVG* format?

regards

Jonathan Chetwynd

* Internet Explorer may soon support SVG**, and Ordinance Survey, National Standards Office and the Meteorological Office already publish data in SVG format... and standards based browsers now have an xslt processors, and this can provide a convenient client-side method for transforming xml into SVG.




**Patrick Dengler
Senior Program Manager
Internet Explorer Team
yesterday we submitted our request to join the Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) Working Group of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)....
http://blogs.msdn.com/ie/archive/2010/01/05/microsoft-joins-w3c-svg-working-group.aspx

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