
Hi, At 06:42 AM 9/29/2010, Eliot wrote:
A place to share would be nice. I hacked a very quick framework out of a CSS lying about so at least I can get automatic in-editor formatting. I hadn't really appreciated how easy it is to set up a framework until I tried to do it.
I also have pieces lying around ... :-)
I'm starting a client project that will involve managing NLM documents and will support light editing with Oxygen (essentially small editorial corrections to files produced by data conversion houses). I don't expect to need to do more than set up some basic buttons and CSS styles.
Since Eliot has Java-fu, he might want to do the buttons stuff, but I also have CSS he could use or adapt, which is reasonably complete for the Publishing or Authoring (although not Archiving) DTDs.
As far as I can tell it's pretty rare for people to author directly in NLM--most journal workflows are non-XML with XML produced at the end from whatever the original source was.
That's largely true, especially since the tag set was originally designed to be a clean target for transformation from existing source data (much of it already in SGML or XML), not a production tag set as such. But it's perfectly useful for that purpose, especially if you bring the same sort of tagging discipline as you would to, say, Docbook or TEI. And there's more of that happening all the time. So a journal publisher may start with NLM as an interchange format for materials submitting to Pubmed Central. But then they discover that investments made there can pay off further back in the document workflow. There are already some early movers using NLM variants behind production systems (some of them not small). This means there is opportunity for editing applications in this space, if not for much authoring as such (conversion vendors and applications will still have a role as long as word processors don't go away), then at least for copy editing and document QA. While in comparison to, say, DITA (which serves the needs of a different sort of document production), the uptake of the NLM JATS ("Journal Article Tag Set") will be slow, there's also no reason to think it won't also be steady and, eventually, strong. Cheers, Wendell ====================================================================== Wendell Piez mailto:wapiez@mulberrytech.com Mulberry Technologies, Inc. http://www.mulberrytech.com 17 West Jefferson Street Direct Phone: 301/315-9635 Suite 207 Phone: 301/315-9631 Rockville, MD 20850 Fax: 301/315-8285 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Mulberry Technologies: A Consultancy Specializing in SGML and XML ======================================================================