The DTD is actually a specification for what constitutes a valid XML document of a certain type. The DTD for Fusedoc describes what makes a valid Fusedoc. The good news is that you absolutely do NOT need it. It's done for tool builders, primarily. If you use the Studio VTM files available at www.fusebox.org, you'll be in good shape. They make writing Fusedocs quite easy.
BTW, I'm including the main Fusebox list on this, Kathryn, as I think others might benefit from your question.
-----Original Message-----
From: Kathryn Butterly [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, June 06, 2002 9:19 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Fusedoc DTD 2.0 file
I am being a good girl and beginning to fusedoc my latest project; I have to admit this is my first try at these.
I have looked at Hal's examples and they make sense, which is the good part. The bad part is that I don't understand the dtd part. Do I need the Fusedoc DTD 2.0 file? If so, why? What do I do with it?
As I understand XML, a DTD is a parser, so I would think that I would only need the DTD if I were using a tool that was parsing my Fusedocs to set up the files. Is that correct?
Kathryn Butterly
Web Developer
Washington Mutual Finance
813 632-4490
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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