On 08/30/2011 07:07 PM, Maurizio Colizza wrote:
> I thought to this problem because in the
> industrial classic workflow , the development of the software starts
> from the requirements document, typically written in Microsoft Office
> Editor or Open Office Editor.

XMLmind XML Editor is typically used to create the documentation of 
hardware, software, etc, *products*. These are typically long-lived 
(i.e. several years) documents which are integral part of the product.




> In the boundaries of an accademic collaboration from my University and
> your Society, is possible use your  software?

As a PHD student, you may be interested by our free Personal Edition.

See http://www.xmlmind.com/xmleditor/persoedition.html

See http://www.xmlmind.com/xmleditor/license_perso.html

Please make sure to follow at least a few lessons of our tutorial -- 
http://www.xmlmind.com/xmleditor/tutorial.html -- before attempting to 
really use XMLmind XML Editor.




> Is interesting for you to introduce the import from a existing document?
>

We would love to be able to create a structured (DITA, DocBook, etc) 
document out of any MS-Word or OpenOffice document. However performing 
this task at the same time accurately and easily for the end-user (i.e. 
without programming) is almost certainly very complex.

For example, please take a look at the implementation of "Paste from 
Word"[*] in CKeditor, the well-known rich text editor written in 
JavaScript. See http://ckeditor.com/

Other clue, CambridgeDocs xDoc which allows to perform MS-Word to XML 
conversions has recently been acquired by EMC². See 
http://www.docscience.com/downloads/DataSheets/h5054-xDoc-DS.pdf


---
[*] works quite well; ``simply'' transforms HTML coming from MS-Word 
--basically a mix of styles and paragraphs-- to clean, structured, HTML.


 
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