How about the xdoc format used by Maven and Anakia ?
http://jakarta.apache.org/site/jakarta-site-tags.html
Steve
http://www.runtime-collective.com
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On Thu, 3 Apr 2003, Alex Romayev wrote:
I haven't seen/used any standardised page layout
Hi,
I've been looking over the suggestions, and they seem to be pretty much
what I was looking for.
I understand now why someone suggested XHTML. However, there is way too
much styling possible in XHTML. I need a content format that somewhat
encourages authors not to put style elements such
Hi all,
I've been looking through the samples in 2.1 dev and all over the wiki
and the web, but have not found many good resources on XML web content
representation.
Perhaps I have missed something; if so, please point me to it.
In my travels, I have found several formats in use:
-
On Thu, 3 Apr 2003, Ryan Hoegg wrote:
snip/
What format do seasoned Cocoon people use to represent web content?
That is, when the choice isn't made for them because of pre-existing
content.
XHTML, of course. At least, when I'm writing suff that will probably
just go on the web. Either
I haven't seen/used any standardised page layout
formats. I'm using Cocoon's portal framework and I
like/use their idea of spliting the page into
independent coplets (sometimes known as portlets). I
know it's not much, but it's a good start and I'm
actually enjoying some nice benefits. What
Studying the DocBook DTD and XSLs can be instructional, as well, for rolling
your own.
DITA seems to be developed specifically to move away from the book
paradigm for creating information products.
You can read about it and download the DTDs and XSLs from IBM. Info at the
links.
Joe