Dear Wiki user, You have subscribed to a wiki page or wiki category on "Cocoon Wiki" for change notification.
The following page has been changed by ConalTuohy: http://wiki.apache.org/cocoon/Con ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ - My name is mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] I live in Wellington, New Zealand. I've been using Cocoon for a couple of years, and I like it a lot. + My name is [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Conal Tuohy] I live in Wellington, New Zealand. I've been using Cocoon for a few years, and I like it a lot. - I work part time at the [http://www.nzetc.org/ New Zealand Electronic Text Centre] which has a Cocoon-based website, and offers consultancy and text-processing services to local businesses, generally using Cocoon as a platform. + I work at the [http://www.nzetc.org/ New Zealand Electronic Text Centre] which has a Cocoon-based website, and also offers consultancy and text-processing services to external clients, generally using Cocoon as a platform. - - I also teach web publishing at a local Polytechnic and I do some other freelance consultancy work. The NZETC website uses ApacheModProxy so as to serve most of the site from static files, and other parts dynamically from Cocoon. @@ -16, +14 @@ I also wrote the JarProtocolExample HOWTO which describes how to read data from inside a JAR, ZIP or Open Office file, though personally I haven't used this at all :-) - On my list of things to do is an application of Topic Maps in Cocoon: I'm looking at ways to define page layouts that read various pieces of information about a topic from a Topic Map and aggregate them into an HTML page. The idea is that a Topic Map will provide an architectural layer to separate the raw resources from the page layout and navigation, and that this will facilitate a better division of labour between the people who define pipelines, and people designing the look and feel of the site. + The site is also based on a Topic Map. We use XSLT to harvest metadata (in XTM form) from our source documents (TEI-encoded books, and a MADS authority file). We use TM4J to merge the topic maps together into a mega topic map (about 180Mb of XTM). Finally we use JXTemplateGenerator to query the map (using jx expressions based on TM4J's API) and present the semantic network of the topic map as HTML links etc. + The idea is that the Topic Map provides an architectural layer to separate the raw resources from the page layout and navigation, and that this facilitates a better division of labour between the two distinct concerns, and also allows for a very high degree of inter-linking between related resources on the site.
